Secret War: Spies, Codes and Guerrillas 1939-1945
Transcription
Secret War: Spies, Codes and Guerrillas 1939-1945
Copyright WilliamCollins AnimprintofHarperCollinsPublishers 1LondonBridgeStreet LondonSE19GF WilliamCollinsBooks.com ThiseBookfirstpublishedinGreatBritainbyWilliamCollinsin2015 Copyright©MaxHastings2015 Theauthorassertsthemoralrightto beidentifiedastheauthorofthiswork Acataloguerecordforthisbookis availablefromtheBritishLibrary Jacketphotographs©Topham/Picturepoint(figure,body);Sovfoto/GettyImages(figure,head);HaywoodMagree/Stringer/GettyImages (paratroopers);Shutterstock.com(Enigmamachine,clouds) Everyefforthasbeenmadetotracecopyrightholdersandtoobtaintheirpermissionfortheuseofcopyrightmaterial.Thepublisher apologisesforanyerrorsoromissionsintheabovelistandwouldbegratefulifnotifiedofanycorrectionsthatshouldbe incorporatedinfutureeditionsofthisbook. AllrightsreservedunderInternationalandPan-AmericanCopyrightConventions.Bypaymentoftherequiredfees,youhavebeen grantedthenon-exclusive,non-transferablerighttoaccessandreadthetextofthise-bookonscreen.Nopartofthistextmaybe reproduced,transmitted,down-loaded,decompiled,reverseengineered,orstoredinorintroducedintoanyinformationstorageand retrievalsystem,inanyformorbyanymeans,whetherelectronicormechanical,nowknownorhereinafterinvented,withouttheexpress writtenpermissionofHarperCollins. SourceISBN:9780007503742 EbookEdition©September2015ISBN:9780008133023 Version:2015-09-11 Dedication For WILLIAMandAMELIE thenextgeneration Contents Cover TitlePage Copyright Dedication Introduction 1BeforetheDeluge 1SEEKERSAFTERTRU TH 2THEBRITISH:GEN TLEMEN AN DPLAYERS 3THERU SSIAN S:TEMPLESOFESPION AGE 2TheStormBreaks 1THE‘ FICTION FLOOD’ 2SHADOWIN GCAN ARIS 3MiraclesTakeaLittleLonger:Bletchley 1‘ TIPS’AN D‘ CILLIS’ 2FLIRTIN GWITHAMERICA 4TheDogsthatBarked 1‘ LU CY’ S’PEOPLE 2SORGE’ SWARN IN GS 3THEORCHESTRAPLAYS 4THEDEAFMAN IN THEKREMLIN 5DivineWinds 1MRSFERGU SON ’ STEASET 2THEJAPAN ESE 3THEMAN WHOWON MIDWAY 6MuddlingandGroping:TheRussiansatWar 1CEN TREMOBILISES 2THEEN DOFSORGE 3THESECON DSOU RCE 4GOU REVITCHTAKESATRAIN 7Britain’sSecretWarMachine 1THESHARPEN D 2THEBRAIN 3ATSEA 8‘Mars’:TheBloodiestDeception 1GEHLEN 2AGEN T‘ MAX’ 9TheOrchestra’sLastConcert 10Guerrilla 1RESISTERSAN DRAIDERS 2SOE 11Hoover ’sG-Men,Donovan’sWildMen 1ADVEN TU RERS 2IVORYTOWERS 3ALLEN DU LLES:TALKIN GTOGERMAN S 12Russia’sPartisans:TerrorisingBothSides 13IslandsintheStorm 1THEABWEHR’ SIRISHJIG 2N OMAN ’ SLAN D 14ALittleHelpfromTheirFriends 1‘ ITSTIN KS,BU TSOMEBODYHASTODOIT’ 2AMERICAN TRAITORS 15TheKnowledgeFactories 1AGEN TS 2THEJEWELOFSOU RCES 3PRODU CTION LIN ES 4IN FERN ALMACHIN ES 16‘Blunderhead’:TheEnglishPatient 17EclipseoftheAbwehr 1HITLER’ SBLETCHLEYS 2‘ CICERO’ 3THEFAN TASISTS 4THE‘ GOOD’N AZI 18Battlefields 1WIELDIN GTHEU LTRAWAN D 2SU ICIDESPIES 3TARN ISHEDTRIU MPH 19BlackWidows,FewWhiteKnights 1FIGHTIN GJAPAN 2FIGHTIN GEACHOTHER 3THEEN EMY:GROPIN GIN THEDARK 20‘Enormoz’ 21DecodingVictory PictureSection Acknowledgements NotesandSources Bibliography Index AlsobyMaxHastings AboutthePublisher Introduction ThisisabookaboutsomeofthemostfascinatingpeoplewhoparticipatedintheSecondWorldWar. Soldiers,sailors,airmen,civilianshadvastlydiverseexperiences,forgedbyfire,geography, economicsandideology.Thosewhokilledeachotherwerethemostconspicuous,butinmanyways theleastinteresting:outcomeswerealsoprofoundlyinfluencedbyahostofmenandwomenwho neverfiredashot.WhileeveninRussiamonthscouldelapsebetweenbigbattles,alltheparticipants wagedanunceasingsecretwar–astruggleforknowledgeoftheenemytoempowertheirarmies, naviesandairforces,throughespionageandcodebreaking.Lt.Gen.AlbertPraun,theWehrmacht’s lastsignalschief,wroteafterwardsofthelatter:‘Allaspectsofthismodern“coldwaroftheair waves”werecarriedonconstantlyevenwhenthegunsweresilent.’TheAlliesalsolaunchedguerrilla andterroristcampaignswhereverinAxis-occupiedterritoriestheyhadmeanstodoso:covert operationsassumedanunprecedentedimportance. Thisbookdoesnotaspiretobeacomprehensivenarrative,whichwouldfillcountlessvolumes.It isinsteadastudyofbothsides’secretwarmachinesandsomeofthecharacterswhoinfluencedthem. Itisunlikelythatanymoregame-changingrevelationswillbeforthcoming,savepossiblyfrom SovietarchivescurrentlylockedbyVladimirPutin.TheJapanesedestroyedmostoftheirintelligence filesin1945,andwhatsurvivesremainsinaccessibleinTokyo,butveteransprovidedsignificant post-wartestimony–adecadeago,Iinterviewedsomeofthemmyself. Mostbooksaboutwartimeintelligencefocusonthedoingsofachosennation.Ihaveinstead attemptedtoexploreitinaglobalcontext.Someepisodesinmynarrativeareboundtobefamiliarto specialists,butanewperspectiveseemspossiblebyplacingthemonabroadcanvas.Thoughspies andcodebreakershavegeneratedavastliterature,readersmaybeasastonishedbysomeofthetales inthisbookasIhavebeenondiscoveringthemformyself.Ihavewrittenextensivelyaboutthe Russians,becausetheirdoingsaremuchlessfamiliartoWesternreadersthanarethoseofBritain’s BletchleyPark,America’sArlingtonHallandOp-20-G.Ihaveomittedmanylegends,andmadeno attempttoretellthemostfamiliartalesofResistanceinWesternEurope,noroftheAbwehr ’sagents inBritainandAmerica,whowereswiftlyimprisonedor‘turned’forthefamousDoubleCross system.Bycontrast,thoughthefactsofRichardSorge’sand‘Cicero’s’*doingshavebeenknownfor manydecades,theirsignificancedeservesarethink. Theachievementsofsomesecretwarriorswereasbreathtakingastheblundersofothers.AsI recounthere,theBritishseveraltimesallowedsensitivematerialtobecapturedwhichcouldhave beenfataltotheUltrasecret.Meanwhile,spywritersdwellobsessivelyonthetreacheryofBritain’s CambridgeFive,butrelativelyfewrecognisewhatwemightcalltheWashingtonandBerkeleyfive hundred–asmallarmyofAmericanleftistswhoservedasinformantsforSovietintelligence.The egregiousSenatorJosephMcCarthystigmatisedmanyindividualsunjustly,buthewasnotwrongin chargingthatbetweenthe1930sand1950stheUSgovernmentandthenation’sgreatestinstitutions andcorporationsharbouredanastonishingnumberofemployeeswhosefirstloyaltywasnottotheir ownflag.True,between1941and1945theRussiansweresupposedlyalliesofBritainandtheUnited States,butStalinviewedthisrelationshipwithunremittingcynicism–asamerelytemporary association,forthenarrowpurposeofdestroyingtheNazis,withnationsthatremainedtheSoviet Union’shistoricfoesandrivals. Manybooksaboutwartimeintelligencefocusonwhatspiesorcodebreakersfoundout.Theonly questionthatmatters,however,ishowfarsecretknowledgechangedoutcomes.ThescaleofSoviet espionagedwarfedthatofeveryotherbelligerent,andyieldedarichtechnologicalharvestfrom BritainandtheUnitedStates,butStalin’sparanoiacrippledexploitationofhiscropofotherpeople’s politicalandmilitarysecrets.ThemostdistinguishedAmericanhistorianofwartimecodebreaking toldmein2014thatafterhalfalifetimestudyingthesubjecthehasdecidedthatAlliedintelligence contributedalmostnothingtowinningthewar.Thisseemstooextremeaverdict,butmyfriend’s remarksshowhowscepticism,andindeedcynicism,breedandmultiplyinthecourseofdecades wadinginthemorassoffantasy,treacheryandincompetencewhereinmostspymastersandtheir servantshavetheirbeing.Therecordsuggeststhatofficialsecrecydoesmoretoprotectintelligence agenciesfromdomesticaccountabilityfortheirownfolliesthantoshieldthemfromenemy penetration.Ofwhatusewasit–forinstance–toconcealfromtheBritishpubliceventheidentities oftheirownspychiefs,whenforyearsMI6’s*mostsecretoperationswerebetrayedtotheRussians byKimPhilby,oneofitsmostseniorofficers?TheUSgovernmentrepudiatedabilateralintelligence exchangeagreedwiththeNKVD*byMaj.Gen.WilliamDonovanofOSS,butofficialcautiondid littlefornationalsecuritywhensomeofDonovan’stopsubordinateswerepassingsecretstoSoviet agents. Intelligence-gatheringisnotascience.Therearenocertainties,evenwhensomeoftheenemy’s correspondenceisbeingread.Thereisacacophonyof‘noise’,fromwhich‘signals’–truthslarge andsmall–mustbeextracted.InAugust1939,ontheeveoftheNazi–SovietPact,aBritishofficial wrunghishandsovertheconfusedmessagesreachingtheForeignOfficeaboutrelationsbetween BerlinandMoscow:‘Wefindourselves,’hewrote–usingwordsthatmaybeappliedtomost intelligence–‘whenattemptingtoassessthevalueofthesesecretreports,somewhatinthepositionof theCaptainoftheFortyThieveswhen,havingputachalkmarkonAliBaba’sdoor,hefoundthat Morganahadputsimilarmarksonallthedoorsinthestreetandhadnoindicationwhichwasthetrue one.’ Itisfruitlesstostudyanynation’ssuccesses,itspearlsofrevelation,inisolation.Thesemustbe viewedinthecontextofhundredsofthousandsofpagesoftriviaoroutrightnonsensethatcrossed thedesksofanalysts,statesmen,commanders.‘Diplomatsandintelligenceagents,inmyexperience, areevenbiggerliarsthanjournalists,’wrotetheBritishwartimespyMalcolmMuggeridge,whowas familiarwithallthree,andsomethingofacharlatanhimself.Thesterilityofmuchespionagewas nicelyillustratedbyFrantišekMoravecofCzechintelligence.Onedayin1936heproudlypresented hiscommandingofficerwithareportonanewpieceofGermanmilitaryequipment,forwhichhe hadpaidaninformanthandsomely.Thegeneralskimmedit,thensaid,‘Iwillshowyousomething better.’HetossedacrosshisdeskacopyofthemagazineDieWehrmacht,pointedoutanarticleonthe sameweapon,andsaiddryly,‘Thesubscriptionisonlytwentycrowns.’ InthesamecategoryfelltheAbwehrtranscriptofaDecember1944USStateDepartmentmessage appointinganeweconomicaffairscounsellortothePolishexilegovernmentinLondon.Thisread, inpart:‘Histransportationexpensesandperdiem,TunistoLondon,viaWashington,DC, transportationexpensesandperdiemforhisfamilyandshipmenteffectsdirectauthorised,subject TravelRegulations.’Apage-longtranslationofthisdecryptwasstamped‘TopSecret’byitsGerman readers.Theman-hoursexpendedbytheNaziwarmachinetosecurethisgemreflectthefashionin whichintelligenceservicesoftenmovemountainstogivebirthtomice. Trustisabondandprivilegeoffreesocieties.Yetcredulityandrespectforprivacyarefatalflaws toanalystsandagent-runners.Theirworkrequiresthemtopersuadecitizensofothercountriesto abandonthetraditionalidealofpatriotism,whetherforcash,outofconviction,oroccasionally becauseofapersonalbondbetweenhandlerandinformant.Itwillalwaysbedisputedterritory, whetherthosewhobetraytheirsociety’ssecretsarecourageousandprincipledheroeswhoidentifya higherloyalty,asmodernGermansperceivetheanti-HitlerResistance,orinsteadtraitors,asmostof usclassifyKimPhilby,AlgerHiss–andinourowntimesEdwardSnowden.Thedayjobofmany intelligenceofficersistopromotetreachery,whichhelpstoexplainwhythetradeattractssomany weirdpeople.MalcolmMuggeridgeasserteddisdainfullythatit‘necessarilyinvolvessuchcheating, lyingandbetraying,thatithasadeleteriouseffectonthecharacter.Inevermetanyoneprofessionally engagedinitwhomIshouldcaretotrustinanycapacity.’ Stalinsaid:‘Aspyshouldbelikethedevil;noonecantrusthim,notevenhimself.’Thegrowthof newideologies,mostsignificantlycommunism,causedsomepeopletoembraceloyaltiesthat crossedfrontiersand,intheeyesofzealots,transcendedmerepatriotism.Morethanafewfeltexalted bydiscoveringvirtueintreason,thoughotherspreferredtobetrayforcash.Manywartime spymasterswereuncertainwhichsidetheiragentswerereallyserving,andinsomecases bewildermentpersiststothisday.TheBritishpettycrookEddieChapman,‘AgentZigZag’,had extraordinarywarexperiencesastheplaythingofBritishandGermanintelligence.Atdifferenttimes heputhimselfatthemercyofboth,butitseemsunlikelythathisactivitiesdidmuchgoodtoeither, servingonlytokeepChapmanhimselfingirlsandshoeleather.Hewasanintriguingbutunimportant figure,oneamongcountlessloosecannononthesecretbattlefield.Moreinteresting,andscarcely knowntothepublic,isthecaseofRonaldSeth,anSOEagentcapturedbytheGermansandtrainedby themtoserveasa‘double’inBritain.IshalldescribebelowthepuzzlementofSOE,MI5,MI6,MI9 andtheAbwehraboutwhosesideSethendedupon. Intelligence-gatheringisinherentlywasteful.Iamstruckbythenumberofsecretserviceofficers ofallnationalitieswhoseonlyachievementinforeignpostingswastostayalive,atheftycosttotheir employers,whilecollectinginformationofwhichnotasmidgeonassistedthewareffort.Perhaps one-thousandthof1percentofmaterialgarneredfromsecretsourcesbyallthebelligerentsinWorld WarIIcontributedtochangingbattlefieldoutcomes.Yetthatfractionwasofsuchvaluethatwarlords grudgednotalifenorapound,rouble,dollar,Reichsmarkexpendedinsecuringit.Intelligencehas alwaysinfluencedwars,butuntilthetwentiethcenturycommanderscoulddiscovertheirenemies’ motionsonlythroughspiesanddirectobservation–countingmen,ships,guns.Thencamewireless communication,whichcreatedrollingnewintelligencecornprairiesthatgrewexponentiallyafter 1930,astechnologyadvanced.‘Therehasneverbeenanythingcomparableinanyotherperiodof historytotheimpactofradio,’wrotethegreatBritishscientificintelligenceofficerDrR.V.Jones.‘… Itwastheproductofsomeofthemostimaginativedevelopmentsthathaveeveroccurredinphysics, anditwasasnearmagicasanyonecouldconceive.’Notonlycouldmillionsofcitizensbuildtheir ownsetsathome,asdidalsomanyspiesabroad,butinBerlin,London,Washington,Moscow,Tokyo electroniceavesdropperswereempoweredtoprobethedeploymentsandsometimestheintentionsof anenemywithoutbenefitoftelescopes,frigatesoragents. Oneofthethemesinthisbookisthatthesignalsintelligencewar,certainlyinitsearlystages,was lesslopsidedintheAllies’favourthanpopularmythologysuggests.TheGermansusedsecret knowledgewelltoplanthe1940invasionofFranceandtheLowCountries.Atleastuntilmid-1942, andeveninsomedegreethereafter,theyreadimportantAlliedcodesbothonlandandatsea,with significantconsequencesforboththeBattleoftheAtlanticandtheNorthAfricancampaign.They wereabletoexploitfeebleRedArmywirelesssecurityduringthefirstyearofOperation ‘Barbarossa’.Fromlate1942onwards,however,Hitler ’scodebreakerslaggedeverfurtherbehind theirAlliedcounterparts.TheAbwehr ’sattemptsatespionageabroadwerepitiful. TheJapanesegovernmentandarmyhighcommandplannedtheirinitial1941–42assaultsonPearl HarborandtheEuropeanempiresofSouth-EastAsiamostefficiently,butthereaftertreated intelligencewithdisdain,andwagedwarinafogofignoranceabouttheirenemies’doings.The Italianintelligenceserviceanditscodebreakershadsomenotablesuccessesintheearlywaryears, butby1942Mussolini’scommanderswerereducedtousingRussianPoWstodotheireavesdropping onSovietwirelesstraffic.RelativelylittleeffortwasexpendedbyanynationonprobingItaly’s secrets,becauseitsmilitarycapabilityshranksorapidly.‘OurpictureoftheItalianairforcewas incompleteandourknowledgefarfromsound,’admittedRAFintelligenceofficerGroup-Captain HarryHumphreysabouttheMediterraneantheatre,beforeaddingsmugly,‘So–fortunately–wasthe Italianairforce.’ Thefirstrequirementforsuccessfuluseofsecretdataisthatcommandersshouldbewillingto analyseithonestly.HerbertMeyer,aveteranofWashington’sNationalIntelligenceCouncil,defined hisbusinessasthepresentationof‘organizedinformation’;hearguedthatideallyintelligence departmentsshouldprovideaserviceforcommandersresemblingthatofshipandaircraftnavigation systems.DonaldMcLachlan,aBritishnavalpractitioner,observed:‘Intelligencehasmuchin commonwithscholarship,andthestandardswhicharedemandedinscholarshiparethosewhich shouldbeappliedtointelligence.’Afterthewar,thesurvivingGermancommandersblamedalltheir intelligencefailuresonHitler ’srefusaltocountenanceobjectiveassessmentofevidence.Signals supremoAlbertPraunsaid:‘Unfortunately…throughoutthewarHitler…showedalackof confidenceincommunicationsintelligence,especiallyifthereportswereunfavourable[tohisown views].’ GoodnewsfortheAxiscause–forinstance,interceptionsrevealingheavyAlliedlosses–were giventhehighestpriorityfortransmissiontoBerlin,becausetheFührerwelcomedthem.Meanwhile badtidingsreceivedshortshrift.BeforetheJune1941invasionofRussia,Gen.GeorgThomasofthe WiRuAmt–theWehrmacht’seconomicsdepartment–producedestimatesofSovietweapons productionwhichapproachedthereality,thoughstillshortofit,andarguedthatthelossofEuropean RussiawouldnotnecessarilyprecipitatethecollapseofStalin’sindustrialbase.Hitlerdismissed Thomas’snumbersoutofhand,becausehecouldnotreconciletheirmagnitudewithhiscontemptfor allthingsSlavonic.Field-MarshalWilhelmKeiteleventuallyinstructedtheWiRuAmttostop submittingintelligencethatmightupsettheFührer. ThewareffortoftheWesterndemocraciesprofitedimmenselyfromtherelativeopennessoftheir societiesandgovernance.Churchillsometimesindulgedspasmsofangertowardsthosearoundhim whovoicedunwelcomeviews,butaremarkablyopendebatewassustainedintheAlliedcorridorsof power,includingmostmilitaryheadquarters.Gen.SirBernardMontgomerywasaconsiderable tyrant,butthosewhomhetrusted–includinghisintelligencechiefBrigadierBillWilliams,a peacetimeOxforddon–couldspeaktheirminds.AlltheUnitedStates’sbrilliantintelligence successesweregainedthroughcodebreaking,andwereexploitedmostdramaticallyinthePacific navalwar.Americangroundcommandersseldomshowedmuchinterestinusingtheirknowledgeto promotedeceptions,asdidtheBritish.D-Dayin1944wastheonlyoperationforwhichthe Americanscooperatedwholeheartedlyonadeceptionplan.EventhentheBritishwereprimemovers, whiletheAmericansmerelyacquiesced–forinstance,byallowingGen.GeorgePattonto masqueradeascommanderofthefictitiousAmericanFirstUSArmyGroupsupposedlydestinedto landinthePasdeCalais.SomeseniorAmericansweresuspiciousoftheBritishenthusiasmfor misleadingtheenemy,whichtheyregardedasreflectingtheirally’senthusiasmforemployingguile toescapehardfighting,therealbusinessofwar. GC&CS,theso-calledGovernmentCodeandCipherSchoolatBletchleyPark,wasofcoursenot merelythemostimportantintelligencehuboftheconflict,butfrom1942Britain’soutstanding contributiontovictory.FolklegendholdsthatAlanTuring’screationofelectro-mechanicalbombes exposedGermany’sentirecommunicationssystemtoAlliedeyesbybreakingtheEnigma’straffic. Thetruthisfarmorecomplex.TheGermansemployeddozensofdifferentkeys,manyofwhichwere readonlyintermittently,oftenoutof‘realtime’–meaninginsufficientlyrapidlytomakepossiblean operationalresponse–andafewnotatall.TheBritishaccessedsomeimmenselyvaluableEnigma material,butcoveragewasneverremotelycomprehensive,andwasespeciallyweakonarmytraffic. Moreover,anever-increasingvolumeoftheGermans’mostsecretsignalswastransmittedthrougha teleprinternetworkwhichemployedanentirelydifferentencryptionsystemfromthatusedby Enigma.TheachievementofBletchley’smathematiciansandlinguistsincrackingtheLorenz Schlüsselzusatzwasquitedistinctfrom,andmoredifficultthan,breakingtheEnigma,eventhough recipientsinthefieldknewtheproductsofallsuchactivitiessimplyas‘Ultra’.*BillTutte,theyoung Cambridgemathematicianwhomadethecriticalinitialdiscoveries,isscarcelyknowntoposterity, yetdeservestobealmostascelebratedasTuring. UltraenabledtheAlliedleadershiptoplanitscampaignsandoperationsinthesecondhalfofthe warwithaconfidencevouchsafedtonopreviouswarlordsinhistory.Knowingtheenemy’shanddid notdiminishitsstrength,however.In1941andinto1942,againandagaintheBritishlearnedwhere theAxisintendedtostrike–asinCrete,NorthAfricaandMalaya–butthisdidnotsavethemfrom losingthesubsequentbattles.Hardpower,whetheronlandoratseaorintheair,wasindispensableto theexploitationofsecretknowledge.So,too,waswisdomonthepartofBritishandAmerican commandersandtheirstaffs–whichprovedconspicuouslylackingatkeymomentsduringthe1944– 45north-westEuropecampaign.Intelligencedid,however,contributeimportantlytomitigatingsome earlydisasters:youngR.V.Jones’sachievementinshowingthepathtowardsjammingtheLuftwaffe’s navigationalbeamssignificantlydiminishedthepaininflictedbytheBlitzonBritain.Atsea,Ultra’s pinpointingofGermanU-boats–withanalarmingnine-monthinterruptionin1942–madeit possibletorerouteconvoystoevadethem,anevenmoreimportantcontributiontoholdingopenthe Atlanticsupplylinethansinkingenemysubmarines. TheAmericanshadsomereasontosuspecttheiralliesofromanticismaboutdeception.Col. DudleyClarke–famousnotleasttoSpanishpolice,whooncearrestedhimwearingwoman’sclothes inaMadridstreet–conductedamassivecoveroperationintheNorthAfricandesertbeforethe October1942BattleofElAlamein.HistorianshavecelebratedClarke’singenuityincreatingfictional forceswhichcausedRommeltodeploysignificantstrengthwellsouthofthefocalpointof Montgomery’sassault.However,suchguiledidnotspareEighthArmyfromthefortnightofhard fightingthatprovednecessarytobreakthroughtheAfrikaKorps.TheGermansarguedthatClarke’s activitieschangednothingintheend,becausetheyhadtimetoredeploynorthwardsbeforethe decisiveBritishassault.InBurmaCol.PeterFleming,brotherofthecreatorofJamesBond,wentto elaborateandhazardouslengthstoleaveahaversackfullofdeceptive‘secretpapers’inawrecked jeepwheretheenemywereboundtofindit,buttheJapanesetooknonoticeofthishaulwhentheygot it.From1942onwards,BritishintelligenceachievedanalmostcompleteunderstandingofGermany’s airdefencesandtheelectronictechnologiestheyemployed,butAlliedbomberforcescontinuedto sufferpunitivecasualties,especiallybeforeUSlong-rangefighterswreckedtheLuftwaffeintheair inthespringof1944. WhateverthecontributionofBritishtacticaldeceptionsinNorthAfrica,Allieddeceivershadtwo importantandalmostindisputablestrategicsuccesses.In1943–44,Operation‘Zeppelin’createda fictitiousBritisharmyinEgyptwhichinducedHitlertomaintainlargeforcesinYugoslaviaand GreecetorepelanAlliedBalkanlanding.Itwasthisimaginarythreat,notTito’sguerrillas,that causedtwenty-twoAxisdivisionstokicktheirheelsinthesouth-eastuntilafterD-Day.Thesecond achievementwas,ofcourse,thatofOperation‘Fortitude’beforeandaftertheassaultonNormandy.It bearsemphasisthatneithercouldhaveexercisedsuchinfluencehadnottheAlliespossessed sufficienthardpower,togetherwithcommandofthesea,tomakeitcrediblethattheymightland armiesalmostanywhere. SomeRussiandeceptionsdwarfthoseoftheBritishandAmericans.Thestoryofagent‘Max’,and thevastoperationlaunchedasadiversionfromtheStalingradoffensive,atacostof70,000Russian lives,isoneofthemostastonishingofthewar,andalmostunknowntoWesternreaders.In1943–44, otherSovietrusespromptedtheGermansrepeatedlytoconcentratetheirforcesinthewrongplaces inadvanceofonslaughtsbytheRedArmy.Airsuperioritywasanessentialprerequisite,intheEastas intheWest:theambitiousdeceptionsofthelaterwaryearswerepossibleonlybecausetheGermans couldnotcarryoutphotographicreconnaissancetodisprovethe‘legends’theyweresoldacrossthe airwavesandthroughfalsedocuments. TheWesternAlliesweremuchlesssuccessfulingatheringhumintthansigint.*NeithertheBritish northeAmericansacquiredasinglehighlyplacedsourcearoundtheGerman,JapaneseorItalian governmentsorhighcommands,untilin1943OSS’sAllenDullesbegantoreceivesomegood Berlingossip.TheWesternAlliesachievednothingliketheRussians’penetrationofLondon, Washington,BerlinandTokyo,thelastthroughtheiragentRichardSorge,workingintheGerman embassy.TheUSgotintothebusinessofoverseasespionageonlyafterPearlHarbor,andfocused moreeffortonsabotageandcodebreakingthanonplacingspies,asdistinctfromparamilitary groups,inenemyterritory.OSS’sResearchandAnalysisDepartmentinWashingtonwasmore impressivethanitsflamboyantbutunfocusedfieldoperations.Moreover,IbelievethatWestern Alliedsponsorshipofguerrillawardidmoretopromotethepost-warself-respectofoccupied nationsthantohastenthedestructionofNazism.Russia’spartisanoperationswereconductedonafar moreambitiousscalethantheSOE/OSScampaigns,andpropagandaboostedtheirachievementsboth atthetimeandinthepost-warera.However,Sovietdocumentsnowavailable,ofwhichmyRussian researcherDrLyubaVinogradovnahasmadeextensiveuse,indicatethatweshouldviewthe achievementsoftheEasternguerrillacampaign,atleastuntil1943,withconsiderablescepticism. Asinallmybooks,Iseekbelowtoestablishthe‘bigpicture’framework,andtoweaveintothis humanstoriesofthespies,codebreakersandintelligencechiefswhoservedtheirrespectivemasters– TuringatBletchleyandNimitz’scryptanalystsinthePacific,theSoviet‘RedOrchestra’ofagentsin Germany,ReinhardGehlenofOKH,WilliamDonovanofOSSandmanymoreexoticcharacters.The foremostreasontheWesternAlliesdidintelligencebestwasthattheybrilliantlyexploitedcivilians,to whomboththeUSandBritishgovernmentsgranteddiscretion,influenceand–wherenecessary– militaryrank,astheiropponentsdidnot.WhenthefirstvolumeoftheBritishofficialhistoryof wartimeintelligencewaspublishedthirtyyearsago,IsuggestedtoitsprincipalauthorProfessor HarryHinsley,aBletchleyveteran,thatitseemedtoshowthattheamateurscontributedmorethandid careersecretserviceprofessionals.Hinsleyrepliedsomewhatimpatiently,‘Ofcoursetheydid.You wouldn’twanttosuppose,wouldyou,thatinpeacetimethebestbrainsofoursocietywastedtheir livesinintelligence?’ Ihavealwaysthoughtthisanimportantpoint,echoedinthewritingsofanotheracademic,Hugh Trevor-Roper,whoservedinbothMI5andMI6,andwhosepersonalachievementmakeshimseem oneofthemoreremarkableBritishintelligenceofficersofthewar.Inpeacetime,mostsecretservices fulfilledtheirfunctionsadequately,oratleastdidlittleharm,whilestaffedbypeopleofmoderate abilities.Onceastrugglefornationalsurvivalbegan,however,intelligencehadtobecomepartofthe guidingbrainofthewareffort.Clashesonthebattlefieldcouldbefoughtbymenofrelativelylimited gifts,thevirtuesofthesportsfield–physicalfitness,courage,grit,alittleinitiativeandcommon sense.Butintelligenceservicessuddenlyneededbrilliance.Itsoundsbanaltosaythattheyhadto recruitintelligentpeople,but–asmorethanafewtwentieth-centurysagesnoted–inmanycountries thisprinciplewashonouredmostlyinthebreach. Afewwordsaboutthearrangementofthisbook:whilemyapproachisbroadlychronological,to avoidleapingtooconfusinglybetweentraitorsinWashington,SovietspiesinSwitzerlandandthe mathematiciansofBletchleyPark,thenarrativepersistswithsomethemesbeyondtheirtime sequence.Ihavedrawnheavilyonthemostauthoritativepublishedworksinthisfield,thoseof StephenBudiansky,DavidKahnandChristopherAndrewnotableamongthem,butIhavealso exploitedarchivesinBritain,GermanyandtheUS,togetherwithmuchpreviouslyuntranslated Russianmaterial.Ihavemadenoattempttodiscussthemathematicsofcodebreaking,whichhasbeen donebywritersmuchmorenumeratethanmyself. ItisoftensaidthatIanFleming’sthrillersbearnorelationshiptotherealworldofespionage. However,whenreadingcontemporarySovietreportsandrecordedconversations,togetherwiththe memoirsofMoscow’swartimeintelligenceofficers,Iamstruckbyhowuncannilytheymirrorthe mad,monstrous,imagineddialogueofsuchpeopleinFleming’sFromRussiaWithLove.Andsome oftheplotsplannedandexecutedbytheNKVDandtheGRUwerenolessfantasticthanhis. Allhistoricalnarrativesarenecessarilytentativeandspeculative,buttheybecomefarmoreso whenspiesareinvolved.Inchroniclingbattles,onecanreliablyrecordhowmanyshipsweresunk, aircraftshotdown,menkilled,howmuchgroundwaswonorlost.Butintelligencegeneratesavast, unreliableliterature,someofitproducedbyprotagonistsfortheirownglorificationorjustification. OneimmenselypopularaccountofAlliedintelligence,BodyguardofLies,publishedin1975,is largelyaworkoffiction.SirWilliamStephenson,theCanadianwhorantheBritishwartime intelligencecoordinationorganisationinNewYork,performedavaluableliaisonfunction,butwas nevermuchofaspymaster.Thisdidnotpreventhimfromassistinginthecreationofawildly fanciful1976biographyofhimself,AManCalledIntrepid,thoughthereisnoevidencethatanybody evercalledhimanythingofthesort.MostaccountsofwartimeSOEagents,particularlywomenand especiallyinFrance,containlargedosesofromantictwaddle.Moscow’smendacityisundiminished bytime:theKGB’sofficialintelligencehistory,publishedasrecentlyas1997,assertsthattheBritish ForeignOfficeisstillconcealingdocumentationaboutitssecretnegotiationswith‘fascist’Germany, andindeeditscollusionwithHitler. AlliedcodebreakingoperationsagainstGermany,ItalyandJapanexercisedfarmoreinfluencethan didanyspy.Itisimpossibletoquantifytheirimpact,however,anditisbafflingthatHarryHinsley,the officialhistorian,assertedthatUltraprobablyshortenedthewarbythreeyears.Thisisastendentious asProfessorM.R.D.Foot’sclaim,inhisofficialhistoryofSOEinFrance,thatAlliedcommanders consideredthatResistancecurtailedtheglobalstrugglebysixmonths.UltrawasatooloftheBritish andAmericans,whoplayedonlyasubordinateroleinthedestructionofNazism,whichwas overwhelminglyaRussianmilitaryendeavour.Itisnomorepossibletomeasurethecontributionof BletchleyParktothetimingofvictorythanthatofWinstonChurchill,Libertyshipsorradar. Likewise,publicistswhomakeclaimsthatsomesensationalmodernbookrecounts‘thespystory thatchangedWorldWarII’mightaswellciteMaryPoppins.OneofChurchill’smostprofound observationswasmadeinOctober1941,inresponsetoademandfromSirCharlesPortal,aschiefof airstaff,foracommitmenttobuild4,000heavybomberswhich,claimedtheairman,wouldbring Germanytoitskneesinsixmonths.Theprimeministerwrotebackthat,whileeverythingpossible wasbeingdonetocreatealargebomberforce,hedeploredattemptstoplaceunboundedconfidence inanyonemeansofsecuringvictory.‘Allthingsarealwaysonthemovesimultaneously,’he declared.Thisisanimmenselyimportantcommentonhumanaffairs,especiallyinwarandaboveall inintelligence.Itisimpossiblejustlytoattributeallcreditforthesuccessorblameforthefailureof anoperationtoanysinglefactor. Yetwhilescepticismaboutthesecretworldisindispensable,sotooisacapacityforwonder:some fabuloustalesprovetrue.Iblushtorememberthedayin1974whenIwasinvitedbyanewspaperto reviewF.W.Winterbotham’sTheUltraSecret.Inthosedays,youngandgreenandamerecasual studentof1939–45,liketherestoftheworldIhadneverheardofBletchleyPark.Iglancedatthe about-to-be-publishedbook,thendeclinedtowriteaboutit:Winterbothammadesuchextraordinary claimsthatIcouldnotcreditthem.Yetofcoursetheauthor,awartimeofficerofMI6,hadbeen authorisedtoopenawindowupononeofthebiggestandmostfascinatingsecretsoftheSecond WorldWar. Noothernationhaseverproducedanofficialhistoryexplicitlydedicatedtowartimeintelligence, andapproachinginmagnitudeBritain’sfivevolumesand3,000-pluspages,publishedbetween1978 and1990.Thislavishcommitmenttothehistoriographyoftheperiod,fundedbythetaxpayer,reflects Britishprideinitsachievement,sustainedintothetwenty-firstcenturybysuchabsurd–asdefinedby itsnegligiblerelationshiptofact–yetalsohugelysuccessfulfeaturefilmsas2014’sTheImitation Game.WhilemosteducatedpeopletodayrecognisehowsubordinatewasthecontributionofBritain toAlliedvictoryalongsidethoseoftheSovietUnionandtheUnitedStates,theyrealisethatherewas somethingChurchill’speopledidbetterthananybodyelse.Althoughtherearemanystoriesinthis bookaboutbunglesandfailures,inintelligenceasineverythingelserelatedtoconflictvictoryis gainednotbythesidethatmakesnomistakes,butbytheonethatmakesfewerthantheotherside.By suchareckoning,theultimatetriumphoftheBritishandAmericanswasasgreatinthesecretwaras itbecameinthecollisionbetweenarmies,naviesandairforces.ThedefiningrealityisthattheAllies won. Finally,whilesomeepisodesdescribedbelowseemcomicorridiculous,andreflecthuman frailtiesandfollies,wemustneverforgetthatineveryaspectoftheglobalconflict,thestakeswere lifeanddeath.Hundredsofthousandsofpeopleofmanynationalitiesriskedtheirlives,andmany sacrificedthem,ofteninthelonelinessofdawnbeforeafiringsquad,togatherintelligenceorpursue guerrillaoperations.Notwenty-first-centuryperspectiveonthepersonalitiesandevents,successes andfailuresofthosedaysshoulddiminishourrespect,evenreverence,forthememoryofthosewho paidthepriceforwagingsecretwar. M A X H A STI N GS WestBerkshire&Datai,Langkawi June2015 *Agents’codenamesinthepagesthatfollowaregivenwithinquotationmarks. *Britain’sMI6isoftenknownbyitsothername,SIS–theSecretIntelligenceService–butforclarityitisgiventheformername throughoutthiswork,evenindocumentsquoted,partlytoavoidconfusionwiththeUSSignalsIntelligenceService. *TheSovietintelligenceserviceanditssubordinatedomesticandforeignbrancheswererepeatedlyreorganisedandrenamedbetween 1934and1954,whenitbecametheKGB.Throughoutthistext‘NKVD’isused,whileacknowledgingalsofrom1943thecounterintelligenceorganisationSMERSh–SmertShpionam–andtheparallelexistencefrom1926oftheRedArmy’smilitaryintelligence branch,theFourthDepartmentorGRU,fiercerivaloftheNKVDathomeandabroad. *AmericansreferredtotheirJapanesediplomaticdecryptmaterialas‘Magic’,butthroughoutthistextforsimplicityIhaveused‘Ultra’, whichbecamegenerallyacceptedonbothsidesoftheAtlanticasthegenerictermforproductsofdecryptionofenemyhigh-gradecodes andciphers,althoughoddlyenoughthewordwasscarcelyusedinsideBletchleyPark. *‘Humint’isthetradetermforintelligencegatheredbyspies,‘sigint’fortheproductofwirelessinterception. 1 BeforetheDeluge 1 S EEK ER S A F TER TR UTH Thesecretwarstartedlongbeforetheshootingonedid.OnedayinMarch1937,aletterdroppedonto thedeskofColonelFrantišekMoravec,addressedto‘thechiefoftheCzechoslovakIntelligence Service’–whichwashimself.Itbegan:‘Iofferyoumyservices.FirstofallIshallstatewhatmy possibilitiesare:1.Thebuild-upoftheGermanarmy.(a)theinfantry…’andsoonforthreecloselytypedpages.TheCzechs,knowingthemselvestobeprospectivepreyofHitler,conductedespionage withanintensitystillabsentelsewhereamongEurope’sdemocracies.Theyinitiallyrespondedtothis approachwithscepticism,assumingaNaziruse,ofwhichtherehadbeenplenty.Eventually,however, Moravecdecidedtoriskaresponse.Afterprotractedcorrespondence,theletter-writerwhomPrague designatedasagentA-54agreedarendezvousintheSudetentownofKraslice.Thiswasalmost wreckedbyagunshot:oneofMoravec’saideswassonervousthathefiredtherevolverinhispocket, puttingabulletthroughthecolonel’strouserleg.Tranquillitywasfortunatelyrestoredbeforethe Germanvisitorarrived,tobehurriedtoanearbysafehouse.Hebroughtwithhimsheavesofsecret documents,whichhehadblithelycartedthroughthefrontierpostsinasuitcase.Amongthematerial wasacopyofCzechoslovakia’sdefenceplanwhichrevealedtoMoravecatraitorinhisownranks, subsequentlyhanged.A-54departedfromKraslicestillnameless,butricherby100,000Reichsmarks. Hepromisedtocallagain,andindeedprovidedhigh-gradeinformationfortheensuingthreeyears. OnlymuchlaterwasheidentifiedasPaulThummel,athirty-four-year-oldofficeroftheAbwehr intelligenceservice. SuchanepisodewasalmosteverydayfareforMoravec.Hewasapassionate,fiercelyenergetic figureofmiddlingheight.Akeengame-player,especiallyofchess,hespokesixlanguagesfluently, andcouldreadsomeLatinandGreek.In1914hewasaneighteen-year-oldstudentatPrague University,withaspirationstobecomeaphilosopher.ConscriptedintotheAustro-Hungarianarmy, likemostCzechshewasunwillingtodiefortheHapsburgs,andonceatthefrontseizedthefirst opportunitytodeserttotheRussians.HewaswoundedundertheirflaginBulgaria,andfinishedthe warwithaCzechvolunteerforceontheItalianfront.WhenCzechoslovakiabecameanindependent statehegratefullycastoffthesetangledloyalties,tobecomeanofficerinitsnewarmy.Hejoinedthe intelligencebranchin1934,andtookoverasitschiefthreeyearslater.Moraveclearnedthetrade mostlyfromspystoriesboughtoffbookstalls,andsoondiscoveredthatmanyreal-lifeintelligence officerstrafficinfiction:hispredecessor ’ssupposedinformantsprovedtohavebeenfigmentsofthe man’simagination,acloakforembezzlement. Thecoloneldevotedmuchofhisservice’sresourcestotalent-spottinginGermanyforinformants, eachnetworkpainstakinglyring-fenced.HesetupapaydayloancompanyinsidetheReich,targeted atmilitaryandcivilserviceclients.Withinayearninetyofthebank’srepresentativeswereroaming Germany,mostbonafideemployees,butsomeofthemintelligencepersonnelwhoidentified borrowerswithaccesstoinformation,vulnerabletobriberyorblackmail.TheCzechsalsopioneered newtechnology–microdotphotography,ultra-violetrays,secretwritingandstate-of-the-art wirelesses.Moravecwasplentifullyfunded,arecognitionofhisroleinhisnation’sfrontline,and wasthusabletopayaLuftwaffemajornamedSalm5,000Reichsmarks–about£500–asaretainer, andafterwardsthehugesumofamillionCzechcrowns–£7,500–forGöring’sairforceorderof battle.Salm,however,flauntedhisnew-foundwealth,andfoundhimselfarrested,triedandbeheaded. Meanwhileotherpeople’sspieswerenotidleinCzechoslovakia:Prague’ssecurityofficersarrested 2,900suspectsin1936alone,mostofthemallegedlyactingforGermanyorHungary. Everymajornationprobedthesecretsofothersinthesamefashion,usingbothovertandcovert means.AfterRussia’sMarshalTukhachevksyvisitedBritaininApril1934,heconveyedpersonallyto StalinaGRUagent’sdescriptionoftheRAF’snewHandleyPageHampdenbomber,detailingits BristolandRolls-Royceenginevariantsandattachingasketchshowingitsarmament: TheAbwehrsomehowlaidhandsonthe1935fixturelistofanICIplant’sfootballteam,whichin thecourseoftheseasonplayedatmostofthecompany’sotherBritishfactories;Berlinthus triumphantlypinpointedseveralchemicalinstallationstheLuftwaffehadhithertobeenunawareof. TheAustralianaviatorSidneyCottonconductedsomepioneeringaerialphotographyoverGermany atthebehestofMI6’sWing-CommanderFredWinterbotham.ThesummerroadsofEuropeteemed withyoungcouplesontouringholidays,someofwhomwerefundedbytheirrespectiveintelligence services,anddisplayedanunromanticinterestinairfields.MI6sentanRAFofficer,designatedas Agent479,togetherwithasecretarytoassisthiscover,onathree-weekspinaroundGermany, somewhathamperedbythefactsthatLuftwaffestationperimetersseldomadjoinedautobahns,and neithervisitorspokeGerman.Theairmanhadoriginallyplannedtotakehissister,whowasfluent, butherhusbandrefusedconsent. IntheNazis’interests,inAugust1935DrHermannGörtzspentsomeweekstouringSuffolkand KentonaZündappmotorbike,pinpointingRAFbaseswithprettyyoungMarianneEmigridinginhis sidecar.ButEmigtiredoftheassignment,orlosthernerve,andGörtz,aforty-five-year-oldlawyer fromLübeckwhohadlearnedEnglishfromhisgoverness,feltobligedtoescortherbackto Germany.Hethenreturnedtocollectacameraandotherpossessions–includingplansofRAF Manston–thatthecouplehadleftbehindinarentedBroadstairsbungalow.Unluckilyfortheaspiring masterspy,thepolicehadalreadysecuredtheseincriminatingitems,followingatipfromthespyconsciouslandlord.GörtzfoundhimselfarrestedatHarwichandsentencedtofouryears’ imprisonment.HewasreleasedanddeportedinFebruary1939;morewillbeheardofHermann Görtz. Forprobingneighbours’secrets,everynation’sskirmisherswereitsserviceofficerspostedto embassiesabroad.ProminentamongBerlinmilitaryattachéswasBritain’sColonelNoelMasonMacFarlane.‘Mason-Mac’wasshrewdbutbombastic.Onedayin1938,hestartledanEnglishvisitor tohisflatbypointingoutofthewindowtothespotwhereHitlerwouldnextdayviewthe Wehrmacht’sbirthdayparade.‘Easyrifleshot,’saidthecolonellaconically.‘Icouldpickthebastard offfromhereaseasyaswinking,andwhat’smoreI’mthinkingofdoingit…Withthatlunaticoutof thewaywemightbeabletogetsomesenseintothings.’Mason-MacFarlanedidnothingofthesort, ofcourse.InhistemperatemomentsheforgedclosefriendshipswithGermanofficers,and transmittedtoLondonastreamofwarningsaboutNaziintentions.Butthevignetteprovidesan illustrationoftheroleplayedbyfantasyinthelivesofintelligenceofficers,totteringonatightrope betweenhighpurposeandlowcomedy. TheUSgovernmentwassaidbyscornfulcriticstopossessnointelligencearm.Inanarrowsense, thiswasso–itdidnotdeploysecretagentsabroad.Athome,J.EdgarHoover ’sFederalBureauof InvestigationwasresponsibleforAmerica’sinternalsecurity.ForalltheFBI’strumpetedsuccesses againstgangstersandintensivesurveillanceoftheUSCommunistPartyandtradesunions,itknew littleofthearmyofSovietspiesroamingAmerica,anddidnothingtodissuadehi-techcorporations fromboomingtheirachievements.GermanmilitaryattachéGen.FriedrichvonBötticherobserved boisterouslyabouthisyearsofserviceinWashington:‘Itwassoeasy,theAmericansaresobroadminded,theyprinteverything.Youdon’tneedanyintelligenceservice.Youhaveonlytobe industrious,toseethenewspapers!’In1936BötticherwasabletoforwardtoBerlindetailedreports onUSrocketexperiments.AnAmericantraitorsoldtheGermansblueprintsofoneofhiscountry’s mostcherishedtechnologicalachievements,theNordenbombsight.ThegeneralurgedtheAbwehr nottobothertodeploysecretagentsintheUS,topreservehishosts’faithinNazigoodwill. Intelligenceagenciesovervalueinformationgainedfromspies.Oneofthemanyacademics conscriptedintoBritain’swartimesecretserviceobserveddisdainfully:‘[MI6]valuesinformationin proportiontoitssecrecy,notitsaccuracy.Theywouldattachmorevalue…toascrapofthird-rate andtendentiousmisinformationsmuggledoutofSofiainthefly-buttonsofavagabondRumanian pimpthantoanyintelligencededucedfromaprudentreadingoftheforeignpress.’Americanforeign correspondentsanddiplomatsabroadprovidedWashingtonwithavisionoftheworldnoless plausiblethanthatgeneratedbyEurope’sspies.MajorTrumanSmith,thelong-servingUSmilitary attachéinBerlinandawarmadmirerofHitler,formedamoreaccuratepictureoftheWehrmacht’s orderofbattlethandidMI6. America’snavalattachésfocusedonJapan,theirmostlikelyfoe,thoughtheywereoftenreducedto photographingitswarshipsfrompassingpassengerlinersandswappinggossipintheTokyo attachés’club.Assecretaryofstatein1929,HenryStimsonhadcloseddownhisdepartment’s‘Black Chamber ’codebreakingoperation,reasoninglikemanyofhisfellow-countrymenthatanationwhich facednoexternalthreatcouldforgosuchsordidinstruments.Nonethelessboththearmyandnavy,in isolationandfiercecompetition,sustainedsmallcodebreakingteamswhichexertedthemselves mightily.TheachievementofWilliamFriedman,borninRussiain1891andeducatedasan agriculturalist,whosearmySignalsIntelligenceServiceteamledbyformermathematicsteacher FrankRowlettreplicatedtheadvancedJapanese‘Purple’diplomaticciphermachineandbrokeitskey inSeptember1940,wasallthemoreremarkablebecauseAmerica’scryptanalystshadshoestring resources.TheymadelittleattempttocrackGermanciphers,becausetheylackedmeanstodoso. TheJapanesespiedenergeticallyinChina,theUSandtheEuropeanSouth-EastAsianempires, whichtheyviewedasprospectivebooty.Theiragentswerenothingifnotcommitted:in1935when policeinSingaporearrestedalocalJapaneseexpatriateonsuspicionofespionage,suchwasthe man’sanxietytoavoidcausingembarrassmenttoTokyothathefollowedtheE.PhillipsOppenheim traditionandswallowedprussicacidinhiscell.TheChineseNationalistsheadedbyChiangKai-shek sustainedaneffectivecounter-intelligenceservicetoprotecthisdictatorshipfromdomesticcritics, butacrossAsiaJapanesespieswereabletogatherinformationalmostunhindered.TheBritishwere moreinterestedincounteringinternalcommunistagitationthanincombatingprospectiveforeign invaders.Theyfounditimpossibletotakeseriously‘theWopsoftheEast’,asChurchillcalledthe Japanese,or‘thelittleyellowdwarfslaves’,inthewordsoftheheadoftheForeignOffice. Britain’sdiplomatswereelaboratelycarelessaboutprotectingtheirsecrets,adheringtothe conventionsofVictoriangentlemen.RobertCecil,whowasoneofthem,wrote:‘Anembassywasan ambassador ’shouseparty;itwasunthinkablethatoneoftheguestscouldbespyingontheothers.’As earlyas1933theForeignOfficereceivedawake-upcall,albeitunheeded:afteroneofitsstaffputhis headinagasoven,hewasrevealedtohavebeensellingBritishcipherstoMoscow.Nextaclerk, CaptainJohnKing,wasfoundtohavebeenfundinganAmericanmistressbypeddlingsecrets.In 1937alocalemployeeinBritain’sRomeembassy,FrancescoConstantini,wasabletoriflehis employer ’spapersforthebenefitoftheItaliansecretservice,becausetheambassadorassumedthat onecouldtrustone’sservants.Atthatperiodalso,Mussolini’smenreadsomeBritishcodes:notall Italianswerethebuffoonstheirenemiessupposed.In1939,whenJapaneseintelligencewantedthe codebooksoftheBritishconsulateinTaipei,itsofficerseasilyarrangedforaJapaneseemployeeto becomenight-dutyman.DuringtheensuingsixmonthsTokyo’sagentsrepeatedlyaccessedthe consulatesafe,itsfilesandcodebooks. Yetnowhereintheworldwasintelligencewiselymanagedandassessed.Thoughtechnological secretswerealwaysusefultorivalnations,itisunlikelythatmuchofthefeveredsecretpoliticaland militarysurveillancetoldgovernmentsmorethantheymighthavegleanedfromacarefulreadingof thepress.Endemicrivalriesinjuredorcrippledcollaborationbetweenintelligenceagencies.In GermanyandRussia,HitlerandStalindiffusedpoweramongtheirsecretpolicemen,thebetterto concentratemasteryintheirownhands.Germany’smainagencywastheAbwehr,itstitleliterally meaning‘security’,thoughitwasresponsibleforbothintelligence-gatheringabroadandcounterespionageathome.Abranchofthearmedforces,itwasdirectedbyAdmiralWilhelmCanaris.When GuyLiddell,counter-espionagedirectorofMI5andoneofitsablestofficers,laterstrovetoexplain theAbwehr ’sincompetence,heexpressedasincerebeliefthatCanariswasinthepayoftheRussians. TheNazisalsohadtheirownsecuritymachine,theReichssicherheitshauptamtorRSHA,directed byErnstKaltenbrunnerwithintheempireofHimmler.ThisembracedtheGestaposecretpoliceand itssistercounter-intelligencebranchtheSicherheitdienstorSD,whichoverlappedtheAbwehr ’s activitiesinmanyareas.AkeyfigurewasWalterSchellenberg,ReinhardHeydrich’saide: SchellenberglatertookovertheRSHA’sforeignintelligence-gatheringservice,whichsubsumedthe Abwehrin1944.HighCommandanddiplomaticcodebreakingactivitieswereconductedbythe Chiffrierabteilung,colloquiallyknownasOKW/Chi,andthearmyhadalargeradiointelligence branchthateventuallybecameOKH/GdNA.Göring’sAirMinistryhaditsowncryptographic operation,asdidtheKriegsmarine.EconomicintelligencewascollectedbytheWiRuAmt,and Ribbentrop’sForeignMinistrygatheredreportsfromembassiesabroad.GuyLiddellwrotecrossly: ‘UnderoursystemofgovernmenttherewasnothingtostoptheGermansfromgettingany informationtheyrequired.’ButtheelaborateNaziintelligenceandcounter-espionagemachineswere farmoreeffectiveinsuppressingdomesticoppositionthaninexploitingforeignsources,evenwhen theyheardsomethingusefulfromthem. France’sintelligencedepartmentsenjoyedalowlystatusandcorrespondinglymeagrebudgets. PessimismoverlaiduponignorancecausedthemconsistentlytooverstateGermanmilitarystrength byatleast20percent.FrantišekMoravecbelievedthatpoliticscrippledFrenchsecuritypolicyaswar loomed:‘Theirdesireto“know”seemedtodecreaseproportionatelyastheNazidangerincreased.’ MoravectheCzechfoundhisFrenchcounterpartshalf-heartedcolleagues,thoughhereturnedfrom oneinter-AlliedconferencewithapresentfromafamousFrenchcriminologist,ProfessorLocarde ofLyons:achemicaldeveloperwhichprovedusefulforexposingsecretwriting. Sincethebeginningoftime,governmentshadbeenabletointercepteachother ’scommunications onlywhenspiesoraccidentsofwarphysicallydivertedmessagesintotheirhands.Now,however, everythingwasdifferent.Wirelesscommunicationwasascienceslightlyolderthanthetwentieth century,butthirtyyearselapsedbeforeitbecameauniversalphenomenon.Then,duringthe1930s, technologicalbreakthroughspromptedaglobalexplosionoftransmissions.Theetherhummed, whinedandcrackledasmessagesprivate,commercial,military,naval,diplomatictraversednations andoceans.Itbecameindispensableforgovernmentsandtheirgeneralsandadmiralstocommunicate operationalordersandinformationbyradio,toeverysubordinate,shipandformationbeyondreach ofalandline.Makingsuchexchangessecuredemandednicejudgements.Therewasatrade-off betweenthespeedatwhichasignalcouldbedispatchedandreceived,andthesubtletyofits encryption.Itwasimpracticabletoprovidefront-linearmyunitswithcipheringmachines,andthus insteadtheyemployedso-calledhand-orfield-ciphers,ofvaryingsophistication–theGermanarmy usedaBritish-derivedsystemcalledDoublePlayfair. Forthemostsecretmessages,theonlyalmostunbreakablecodewasthatbasedupona‘one-time pad’,anamethatreflecteditsdesignation:thesenderemployedauniquecombinationofletters and/ornumberswhichbecameintelligibleonlytoarecipientpre-suppliedwiththeidenticalformula. TheSovietsespeciallyfavouredthismethod,thoughtheirclerkssometimescompromiseditbyusing aone-timepadmorethanonce,astheGermansfoundtotheiradvantage.Fromthe1920sonwards, someofthemajornationsstartedtoemploycipherswhichweredeemedimpregnableifcorrectly used,becausemessageswereprocessedthroughelectrically-poweredkeyboardmachineswhich scrambledthemintomulti-millionsofcombinations.Themagnitudeofthetechnologicalchallenge posedbyanenemy’smachine-encryptedsignalsdidnotdeteranynationfromstrivingtoreadthem. ThisbecamethemostimportantintelligenceobjectiveoftheSecondWorldWar. ThebrighteststaroftheDeuxièmeBureau,France’sintelligenceservice,wasCapitaineGustave Bertrand,headofthecryptanalyticalbranchinthearmy’sSectiondesExamens,whohadrisenfrom therankstooccupyapostthatnoambitiouscareerofficerwanted.OneofhiscontactswasaParis businessmannamedRodolpheLemoine,bornRudolfStallman,sonofarichBerlinjeweller.In1918 StallmanadoptedFrenchnationality;simplybecausehelovedespionageasagameinitsownright, hebegantoworkfortheDeuxième.InOctober1931heforwardedtoParisanofferfromoneHansThiloSchmidt,brotherofaGermangeneral,tosellFranceinformationaboutEnigmainordertodig himselfoutofafinancialhole.Bertrandaccepted,andinreturnforcashSchmidtdeliveredcopious materialaboutthemachine,togetherwithitskeysettingsforOctoberandNovember1932.Thereafter heremainedontheFrenchpayrolluntil1938.SincetheFrenchknewthatthePoleswerealsoseeking tocrackEnigma,thetwonationsagreedacollaboration:Polishcryptanalystsfocusedonthe technology,whiletheirFrenchcounterpartsaddressedencipheredtexts.Bertrandalsoapproachedthe British,butattheoutsettheyshowednointerest. Britain’scodebreakershadacquiredanearly-modelcommercialEnigmaasearlyas1927,and examineditwithrespect.Sincethen,theyknewthatithadbeenrenderedmuchmoresophisticatedby theinclusionofacomplexwiringpatternknownasaSteckerbrett,orplugboard.Itnowoffereda rangeofpossiblepositionsforasingleletterof159millionmillionmillion.Thatwhichhuman ingenuityhaddevised,itwasatleasttheoreticallypossiblethathumaningenuitymightpenetrate.In 1939,however,nooneforamomentimaginedthatsixyearslaterintelligencesnatchedfromthe airwaveswouldhaveprovedmoreprecioustothevictors,moredisastrousforthelosers,thanevery reportmadebyallthespiesofthewarringnations. 2 TH E BR I TI S H : GENTLEM ENA ND P LAYER S ThereputationofMI6wasunmatchedbythatofanyothersecretservice.ThoughHitler,Stalin, MussoliniandJapan’sgeneralssharedascepticism,orevenscorn,abouttheoldlion’sfitnessto fight,theyvieweditsspieswithextravagantrespect,indeedcherishedabeliefintheiromniscience. Britishprowessinclandestineactivitydatedbacktothesixteenthcenturyatleast.FrancisBaconwrote inhisHistoryoftheReignofKingHenryVII:‘AsforhissecretSpials,whichhedidemploybothat homeandabroad,bythemtodiscoverwhatPractisesandConspiracieswereagainsthim,surelyhis Caserequiredit.’QueenElizabethI’sSirFrancisWalsinghamwasoneofhistory’slegendary spymasters.MuchlatercametheromancesofRudyardKipling’sKim,ofJohnBuchan’sRichard Hannay,ofdashing‘clublandheroes’whoplayedchessforEnglandwithathousandlivepieces acrossaboardthatspannedcontinents.AwartimeBritishsecretservantobserved:‘Practicallyevery officerImetinthatconcern,athomeandabroad,was,likeme,imagininghimselfasHannay.’The greatDanishphysicistNielsBohrtoldthescientificintelligenceofficerR.V.Jonesthathewashappy tocooperatewiththeBritishsecretservicebecause‘itwasrunbyagentleman’. BritishintelligencehadenjoyedagoodGreatWar.TheRoyalNavy’scodebreakers,suchmenas DillwynKnoxandAlastairDenniston,labouringintheAdmiralty’sRoom40,providedcommanders withawealthofinformationaboutthemotionsoftheGermanHighSeasFleet.Thedecryptionand publicrevelationofBerlin’s1917ZimmermannTelegram,urgingtheMexicanstotakeaggressive actionagainsttheUnitedStates,playedacriticalroleinbringingtheAmericansintothewar.Fortwo yearsaftertheNovember1918Armistice,thesecretservicewasdeeplyinvolvedintheAllies’ unsuccessfulattempttoreversetheoutcomeoftheRussianRevolution.Evenafterthiswas abandoned,thethreatfrominternationalcommunismremainedtheforemostpreoccupationofBritish espionageandcounter-espionage. Yetamidtheinter-warslump,fundingwassqueezed.MI6mouldered,toanextentlittleunderstood byeitherBritain’sfriendsorfoes.HughTrevor-Roper,thehistorianwhobecameoneofitswartime officers,wrote:‘ForeignintelligenceservicesenviedtheBritishsecretservice;itwastheiridealised model…Itenjoyedthereputationofaninvisible,implacableforce,likethePlatonicworld-spirit, operatingeverywhere.TotheNazigovernment,itwasatthesametimeabogeyandanideal…The reality…wasratherdifferent.’MI6’sseniorofficersweremenofmoderateabilities,drawnintothe organisationbythelureofplayingoutapasticheofKipling’s‘GreatGame’,andoftenafterearlier careersascolonialpolicemen. Theymasqueradedaspassportcontrolofficersinembassiesabroad,orshuffledpaperinthe service’saustere–indeed,franklysqualid–headquartersbesideStJames’sParkundergroundstation, inBroadwayBuildings,aplaceofthreadbarecarpetsandunshadedlightbulbs.MI6sustainedaquirky traditionofpayingitsstafftax-freeandincash,butsosmallapittancethataprivateincomewas almostessentialforofficerswhoaspiredtoanupper-middle-classlifestyle,whichmeantallofthem. Thoughitsbudgetwasprogressivelyincreasedfrom£180,000in1935to£500,000in1939,few graduatesenteredtheservice,becauseitsbossesdidnotwantthem.MI6,intheviewofone practitioner,wasdesignedmerelytoreceiveintelligenceratherthanactivelytoprocureit.Itwasrun byacoterieofanti-intellectualofficerswhosawtheirprincipal,ifnotsole,taskasthatofcombating revolutionarycommunism.TheshiftofemphasistomonitoringNazisandfascistsduringthelate pre-warperiodcausedgreatdifficulties. Somerecruitsofthatperiodprovedill-suitedtotheessentialnastinessofespionage.Lt.Cmdr JosephNewill,aretiredsailorpostedtoScandinaviain1938onthestrengthofspeakingNorwegian, wailedtoLondon:‘IdoubtwhetherIhavethenaturalguilesoessentialforthiswork!’Newill complainedthathisroleinvolvedmuchmorehardlabourthanhehadexpected.Hetoldhisstation chiefpetulantly:‘Iam52andIamnotgoingtoworkmyselftodeathatmytimeoflife.’Buthewas keptinthejob,andcontrivedtomeetBroadway’sundemandingstandards.MI6’sShanghaistation chief,HarrySteptoe,operatedundercoverasvice-consul.Ajauntylittlecock-sparrowfigurewho affectedamoustacheandmonocle,hepuzzledaforeigndiplomatbyhisappearanceatreceptionsina lovat-greensuitadornedwithgoldbraid.Wasthis,demandedthediplomat,thefull-dressuniformof theBritishsecretservice?WhentheJapaneseinternedSteptoein1942,theydismissedthepossibility thatsuchacomicfigurecouldbeaspymaster,andinsteadsubjectedtobrutalinterrogationahapless BritishCouncilrepresentative,whosefieldofknowledgewasexclusivelycultural. BroadwaystruggledtosecureintelligencefromtheContinent.In1936anewMI6departmentwas formedtomonitorGermanyandItaly.ZSectionwasrunbyClaudeDansey,aformerimperial soldierwhoboreahaversackgroaningwithblimpishprejudices,amongthemaloathingfor Americans.Itbecameanalmostindependentfiefdom,whichoperatedundercommercialcoverfrom officesinBushHouseinTheStrand.ItssourcesweremostlyelderlyretreadssuchastheLithuanian BaronWilliamdeRopp,whoformorethanadecadeextractedfromtheBritish£1,000ayear–a handsomecompetence–inreturnforfragmentsofGermanpoliticalgossip.TheNaziswerewell awareofdeRopp’srole,andfedhimwhattheywantedLondontohear.InAugust1938theBaron decidedthathissecretlifehadbecometoofraught,andwiselyretiredtoSwitzerland. NavalengineerDrKarlKruger ’sstoryhadadarkerending.From1914to1939hefedsomegood informationtotheBritishonacash-and-carrybasis,butvanishedfromsightamonthbeforethe outbreakofwar.HisfileatBroadwaywaseventuallymarked‘Agentpresumed“dead”.’Thiswasnot surprising,becauseKruger–likemostofMI6’sGermaninformants–wascontrolledbyitsHague station,whereoneofthelocalstaff,FolkertvanKoutrik,wasontheAbwehr ’spayroll.Theservice’s bestpre-warhumintsourcewasWolfgangGansEdlerzuPutlitz,pressattachéattheGermanembassy inLondon,anaristocratandhomosexual.HewasrunbyKlopUstinov–fatheroftheactorPeter–a Russian-bornjournalistwholosthisnewspaperjobin1935becauseofhisJewishness.WhenPutlitz wastransferredtoTheHaguein1938,UstinovfollowedhimatMI6’sbehest.AfterFolkertvan KoutriklaterbetrayedtheBritishoperationinHolland,PutlitzhastilysoughtasyluminLondon. TheflowofintelligencefromtheContinentwasthin.TheAirMinistrycomplainedaboutthe paucityofmaterialontheuseofaircraftintheSpanishCivilWar,animportantissueforplanners. Britain’sambassadorinBerlin,SirNevileHenderson,sharedwithhisfellow-diplomatsadisdainfor espionagewhichcausedhimtorefusediplomaticstatustoBroadway’s‘PassportControlOfficers’. EvenwhereMI6triedtoprovideGermaninformantswithwirelesssets,mostwerereluctanttotake them,becausediscoveryofsuchequipmentbytheGestapoensuredadeathsentenceforthepossessor. Veryoccasionally,amongthemountainofrubbishthataccumulatedinBroadway’sfilestherewas apearl.Inthespringof1939anagentcodenamed‘theBaron’,withgoodsocialconnectionsinEast Prussia,reportedtohishandlerHarryCarrinHelsinkithattheGermansweresecretlynegotiating withStalin.HefollowedthisupwithafurthermissiveinJune,assertingthattalksbetweenBerlinand Moscowweremakinggoodprogress.YetthissensationalpointertotheloomingNazi–SovietPact, whichafterwardsprovedtohavecomefromgossipamongaristocratsworkingintheGerman ForeignMinistry,wasdismissedinBroadway.ToMI6’sseniorofficers,adevils’pactbetweenStalin andHitlerseemedafantasticnotion.Anauthenticscoopwasmissed;first,becauseMI6,likemost intelligenceorganisations,hadaninstinctiveandusuallyprudentscepticismaboutitsownsources; second,becausewhat‘theBaron’reportedrancontrarytohisemployers’expectations.Atthattime, andindeedthroughoutthewar,MI6hadnointernalmachineryforanalysingincomingintelligence, thoughitschiefscouldpointoutthattheAxisPowerslackedthisalso. CzechoslovakiaandPolandoccupiedthefrontlineintheEuropeanconfrontationwithHitler.MI6 showedlittleinterestincollaborationwiththeirintelligenceservicesuntilMarch1939,whenthe strategicpicturechangeddramatically:theBritishandFrenchgovernmentsgaveasecurityguarantee toPoland.ThisgalvanisedBroadway. On25July,aBritishdelegationcomposedofanavalintelligenceofficertogetherwithAlastair Denniston,directoroftheGovernmentCode&CypherSchool,andDillwynKnox,oneofits foremostcodebreakers,joinedFrance’sGustaveBertrand–himselfnocryptographer,butanotable facilitatoranddiplomat–atanexploratorymeetingwiththeirPolishcounterpartsledbyCol.Gwido Langer,heldattheircryptographiccentreintheKabackiewoodsnearPyry,southofWarsaw.The firstday’stalks,conductedinmixedFrenchandGerman,wentverybadly.Knox,forreasons unknown,wasinaviletemper,andhighlyscepticalthatthePoleshadanythingtotellworthhearing. Heseemedunabletounderstandthemethodsbywhichtheyclaimedtohaveachievedthe breakthroughwhichhadenabledthemtoreadsomeGermannavaltraffic.Allthepartiespresentwere fencing,todiscovereachother ’sstateofknowledge.Warsaw’sdecisiontoinvolvetheBritishwas promptedbynewdifficultiesthathadfrustratedtheirowncodebreakerssincetheGermanson1 Januaryadoptedanenhancedsteckerboard,fortheirEnigmas,withtenplugsinsteadofseven.Onthe secondday,26July,theconference’satmospherewastransformedforthebetter.Inthebasementof thebuildingthePolesshowedofftheir‘bomby’,primitivecomputingdevicesdesignedtotest multiplemathematicalpossibilities.Thentheyproducedacoupdethéâtre:theypresentedboth visitingdelegationswithmimickedcopiesoftheEnigmabuiltbytheirownmen.Knox’sscepticism crumbled,andthemeetingendedinamoodofgoodwillandmutualrespect.EverybodyatBroadway recognisedtheimportanceofthePoles’gesturetotheiralliesasacontributiontothesecretstruggle againsttheNazis.MarianRejewski,aformermathematicsstudentatWarsawUniversitywhohad joinedtheKabackiewoodsteambackin1932,istodayacknowledgedasapioneeramongthosewho laidbarethesecretsofEnigma,evenifitfelltoothers,inBritain,toadvanceandexploitRejewski’s achievement. StewartMenzies,thendeputychiefofMI6,wassoimpressedbytheoutcomeofthePolishtripthat heturnedupinpersonatVictoriastationtogreetGustaveBertrand–andtoinspectthemimicked Enigma.KnoxsentthePolesagiftofscarves,decoratedwithimagesofDerbyrunners,withtheletter thankinghishostsfortheir‘co-operationandpatience’.Atoraroundthistimealso,thePoles providedtheBritishwithfiveoftheEnigma’seightalternativerotors.Achasmstillyawned,however, betweenunderstandinghowthemachineworked,andachievingtheabilitytoreaditstraffic.Though atrickleofGermanmessageswerebrokenbyhumaningenuityduringthewinterof1939–40,traffic wasbreachedonanindustrialscaleonlyfrom1941onwards,followingthecreationofrevolutionary electro-mechanicaltechnology.Nonetheless,theassistanceoftheFrenchandPolesdramatically acceleratedprogressattheGC&CS,nowevacuatedfromLondontoasafercountryhome.Physical possessionoftheenemy’sencryptioninstrumentenableditscryptanalyststograspthemountainous challengetheymustovercome. Until1939,andinlargemeasurefortwoyearsthereafter,Britishintelligenceremaineddependent foritsviewoftheworlduponhumint–reportsfrominformantsabroad.HowwelldidMI6fulfilits responsibilitytobriefthegovernmentaboutthemountingthreatfromNaziGermany–‘Twelveland’ inBroadwayparlance?ItproducedmanyreportsarguingthatHitler ’slong-termambitionslayinthe East,andthiswasfundamentallycorrect.Unfortunatelyforitscredibility,however,in1940Germany chosefirsttoseektodisposeoftheWesterndemocracies.MI6wasinnodoubtthatHitlerwas rearmingfast,butinsistentlyemphasisedtheweaknessoftheindustrialbasefromwhichheaspiredto makewar.ResponsibilityforgatheringeconomicdatarestedwiththeIndustrialIntelligenceCentre, anoffshootadministeredsince1934bytheForeignOffice,butrunbytheveteransecretservice officerMajorDesmondMorton.Duringthe‘wildernessyears’,MortonpassedtoWinstonChurchill –withthesanctionofprimeministerStanleyBaldwin–detailsofGermanrearmamentwhich empoweredtheunheededprophettocryforthwarningstotheworld.Ironically,theMajorwildly overstatedthegrowthofHitler ’smilitarymachine:Mortonneverhadmuchgraspofeconomicsin general,noroftheNazieconomyinparticular. Butmodernhistorianscriticalofpre-warBritishintelligencefailuresmisssomeimportantpoints. Inthosedaysfewpeopleofanynationalityunderstoodeconomicanalysis.TheIICwascorrectin judgingthatGermanywasill-preparedtoconductalongstruggle,andwasrenderedvulnerablebyits dependenceonimportedcommoditiesandespeciallyoil.TheGermaneconomy,asAdamToozehas shown,wasnotstrongenoughtomeetthehugechallengeHitlersoughttofulfil,ofconqueringthe mostadvancedsocietiesonearth.Germany’sGDPwasnolargerthanBritain’s,andherpeople’sper capitaincomeswerelower.In1939,Hitler ’sexpendituresonarmamentshadreducedhiscountry’s financestoaparlouscondition.Butitwasaskingtoomuchofanyintelligenceservicetogaugethe potentialofGermanindustryunderthestimulusofconflict:totheveryendofWorldWarII,thebest brainsintheAlliednationsfailedfullytoachievethis.MI6couldnotbeexpectedtopredictHitler ’s conquests,whichdramaticallyenhancedhisaccesstooil,rawmaterialsandslavelabour. Onthemilitaryside,neitherMI6northeservicedepartmentslearnedmuchaboutthenew technologyandtacticsbeingdevelopedbyBritain’senemies.Norabouttheirlimitations:theywildly overratedtheLuftwaffe’sabilitytodevastateBritain’scities.In1938,Broadwayreportedthatthe Germanshad927first-linebomberscapableofmounting720sortiesadayanddropping945tonsof ordnance(thiswasanexaggerationof50percent),andprojectionsoflikelycasualtieswereeven moreinflated.WarOfficeappreciationsoftheGermanarmywereequallymistaken,especiallyin estimatingitspotentialmobilisedstrength.Thesesuggestedin1939thatHitlerwasalreadymasterof thelargestwarmachinehisnation’sresourcescouldbear.Rearmament,coupledwithvastpublic expenditure,‘hadtaxedtheenduranceoftheGermanpeopleandthestabilityoftheeconomicsystem toapointwhereanyfurthereffortcanonlybeachievedattheriskofabreakdownoftheentire structure’. AFebruary1939StrategicalAppreciationbythechiefsofstaff,draftedbytheJointPlanning Committee,assertedthatBritaincouldsurvivealongwarbetterthanGermany.Thiswastrue,butthe chiefssaidnothingaboutthedangerthatitcouldmeanwhileloseashortone.Moreover,theynever pressedthecabinettoacknowledgetheshockingweaknessofBritain’sFarEastempire.Thethree services’intelligencebrancheshadnocontactwitheachother,andtherewerenojointstaffs. Asforpolitics,anMI6officerwroteinaNovember1938reportfortheForeignOffice:‘Noteven Hitler ’sintimates,accordingtooneofthem,knowsifhewouldreallyriskworldwar.’Afewmonths later,theservice’scredibilitywasseverelyinjuredbyitsissueofwarningsthatGermanyintended imminentlytostrikeatWesternEurope,startingwithHolland.Embarrassmentwasincreasedbythe factthattheForeignOfficeforwardedthisalarmcalltotheUSgovernment.OneoftheBritish recipients,seniorcivilservantSirGeorgeMounsey,deliveredablastagainstMI6whichechoed aroundWhitehall.TheForeignOffice’sstandingwasdamaged,hesaid,byactingonthebasisof‘a highlysensationalandhighlydisturbingkindofinformationwhich[MI6]areunabletoguarantee’. Mounseywasdismissiveofallcovertsources,agentswhoserumour-mongeringhadprompted Broadway’swarning:‘Theyhaveasecretmissionandtheymustjustifyit…Ifnothingcomestohand forthemtoreport,theymustearntheirpaybyfindingsomething…Arewegoingtoremainso attachedtorelianceonsecretreports,whichtieourhandsinalldirections?’Mounseyhadhisown agenda:tosustainthepolicyofappeasementadoptedbyNevilleChamberlainandLordHalifax, whomheadmiredprodigiously.Hisviewsnonethelessreflectedageneralscepticisminhighplaces aboutBroadway’sperformance. GladwynJebboftheForeignOffice,oftenacriticofMI6,onthisoccasionleapttoitsdefence. Whileacknowledgingthefrustrationsofdealingwithsecretorganisations,hesaidthathecouldnot forgetthatitsofficers‘didwarnusoftheSeptember[1938Munich]crisis,andtheydidnotgiveany colourtotheridiculousoptimismthatprevaileduptotherapeofCzechoslovakia,ofwhichour official[diplomatic]reportsdidnotgiveusmuchwarning’.InDecember1938Broadwayoffereda soundcharactersketchofGermany’sFührer,atatimewhenmanyBritishdiplomatsandpoliticians stilldeludedthemselvesthathewasamantheycoulddobusinesswith.‘Amonghischaracteristics,’ assertedtheMI6report,‘arefanaticism,mysticism,ruthlessness,cunning,vanity,moodsofexaltation anddepression,fitsofbitterandself-righteousresentment,andwhatcanonlybetermedastreakof madness;butwithitallthereisgreattenacityofpurpose,whichhasoftenbeencombinedwith extraordinaryclarityofvision.Hehasgainedthereputationofbeingalwaysabletochoosetheright momentandrightmethodfor“gettingawaywithit”.Intheeyesofhisdisciples,andincreasinglyin hisown,“theFührerisalwaysright”.Hehasunboundedself-confidence,whichhasgrownin proportiontothestrengthofthemachinehehascreated;butitisaself-confidencewhichhaslatterly beentemperedlessthanhithertowithpatienceandrestraint.’ ItiseasytocataloguetheshortcomingsofMI6.LikemostofitssisterservicesontheContinent,in 1939itcommandedlittlerespectinhighplaces,andhadsmallinfluenceonpolicy-making.Itseems necessarytogobeyondthis,however,andposethequestion:whatmightitsspieshaveusefully discovered,grantedmoreresourcesandclevererpeople?Thelikelyansweris:notmuch.MI6’s reportingwasmatchedbyadailybombardmentofnewspaperheadlines,bothshowingbeyond peradventurethatGermanywasrearming.MoreaccurateanddetailedinformationaboutHitler ’s armedforceswouldhavebeenusefultotheWarOfficeandDowningStreet,butthecriticalissue,the vitaluncertainty,wasnotthatofGermany’scapabilities,butratherthatofitsintentions. Itseemsquitemisplacedtoblamewrongorinadequateintelligenceforthecalamitousfailureof BritainandFrancetodealeffectivelywiththeNazis.Bothnationscorrectlyassessedtheoptionsat Hitler ’sdisposalforonslaughtsEastorWest.MI6canscarcelybeheldresponsibleforfailingto anticipateexactlywhereorwhenhewouldattack,becausehehimselfwasanopportunistwho reservedhisdecisionsuntilthelastmoment.SirAlexanderCadogan,permanentunder-secretaryat theForeignOffice,wrotemuchlater:‘Weweredailyinundatedbyallsortsofreports.Itjust happenedthatthesewerecorrect;wehadnomeansofevaluatingtheirreliabilityatthetimeoftheir receipt.(Norwastheremuchthatwecoulddoaboutit!)’Ratherthanafailureofintelligence,what matteredwasthedemocracies’failureofwill–therefusaltoacknowledgethattheNazisconstituted anirreconcilableforceforevil,whichtheverysurvivalofEuropeancivilisationmadeitessentialto destroy,ratherthantobargainwith. MostofHitler ’sopponentsinsideGermany,andindeedacrossEurope,werecommunistswho consideredtheRussianstheonlypeoplebothwillingandabletochallengefascism.Everythingsaid anddonebytheBritishandFrenchgovernmentsbeforetheoutbreakofwarconfirmedanti-Nazisin thatview.Thus,peoplewhowishedtocontributetoundoingHitlerofferedinformationtotheagents ofMoscowmuchmorereadilythantothoseofLondonorParis.Itwasanti-Nazis’pooropinionof NevilleChamberlainthatmadethemreluctanttolooktohiscountryasashieldagainstHitler,not theirperceptionofMI6. ItisfarmoreplausibletoarguethatBritain’sdiplomatsshouldhaveexposedthedictators’ intentionsthantosuggestthatitsspiesmighthavedoneso.Inpeacetime,goodintelligenceofficers canassisttheirgovernmentstograsptheeconomic,militaryandtechnologicalcapabilitiesof prospectiveenemies,butitisunusualforasecretservicetoprovideareliablecribabouttheir intentions.Topdiplomatsoughttohavebeenclevererthanintelligenceofficers.Theirtraining, experienceandaccesstosourcesshouldhaveempoweredthemtoassesstheworldwithgreater wisdomthanBroadway’soldsoldiers.ItseemsfarmorediscreditablethatHenderson,Britain’s ambassadorinBerlin,waswillingforsolongtothinkwellofHitler,thanthatMI6withitsmeagre resourceswasunabletotellthegovernmentwhattheFührerwoulddonext.IfaGermananti-Nazihad turneduponHenderson’sembassydoorstep,offeringinsideinformation,itislikelythathewould havebeensentpacking. AdmiralSirHughSinclair–‘C’,astheheadofthesecretservicewasalwaysknown–died suddenlyinNovember1939,havingoccupiedhispostforsixteenyears.WinstonChurchill,asFirst LordoftheAdmiralty,pressedtheclaimsofRear-AdmiralJohnGodfrey,directorofnaval intelligence,tosucceedhim.Instead,however,Sinclair ’sdeputy,forty-nine-year-oldGuardsofficer BrigadierStewartMenzies,convincedtheForeignOfficeandtheprimeministerthathehadbeen anointedbythedyingSinclairashisrightfulsuccessor.Hethusinheritedamantlethathewaswidely consideredill-fittedtowear.TheninthDukeofBuccleuch,whohadbeenMenzies’fagatEton,tolda friendthat‘C’s’contemporariesweremystified‘howsounbelievablystupidamancouldhaveended upinsuchaposition’.HughTrevor-RopersneeredatMenziesas‘athoughtlessfeudallord,living comfortablyonincomeproducedfromthelabourofpeasantswhomhehadneverseen,working estateswhichhehadnevervisited’. Thiswashyperbolic,asweremostofthehistorian’sprivatejudgementsonhiscolleagues,butit wastruethatMenzieshadlearnedhiscraftinabadschool–notsomuchEtonasserviceonthestaff ofBrigadierJohnCharteris,Field-MarshalSirDouglasHaig’segregiousintelligencechiefonthe WesternFront.Menzies’DSOandMCshowedthathedidnotlackcourage.Hissocialskillssufficed towintheconfidenceofMaj.Gen.Hastings‘Pug’Ismay,soontobecomeChurchill’schiefofstaff, andinsomedegreethatoftheprimeministerhimself.But‘C’knewlittleofthewiderworldhe aspiredtospyupon,andtoleratedinBroadwayabevyofevenlessinspiredsubordinates. Decisionswerepowerfullyinfluencedbyhistwojointdeputies,ValentineVivianandClaude Dansey,whohatedeachother.VivianwasaformerIndianpolicemanwhowascreditedwithamajor roleinfrustratingthemachinationsoftheComintern–theCommunistInternational–inSouth AmericaandtheFarEast;hewasalsoanofficeintriguerofenergyandskill.MeanwhileDanseywent brieflytoBerninSeptember1939,totrytoorganiseintelligencelinksfromneutralSwitzerlandto Germany.Aplentifulsupplyoffraudulentinformantsemerged,ofwhombynomeansthemost imaginativewasaGermanrefugeeinSwitzerlandwhousedhisnation’sArmyListtofabricatea mobilisationprogrammewhichheattemptedtosell.OneofthefewusefulsourcesDanseyidentified wasanAustrianPole,CountHorodyski.He,inturn,introducedtheBritishtoHalinaSzymańska,wife oftheformerPolishmilitaryattachéinBerlin,nowanexileinSwitzerland.ShebecameoneofMI6’s mostusefulconduits,withconnectionsintheAbwehr.DanseythereafterreturnedtoLondon,where heexercisedapowerfulinfluenceonthewartimefortunesofMI6,mostlytoitsdetriment. Duringtheyearsthatfollowed,Britain’ssecretservicerecruitednumbersofoutstandingofficers andagents,whodidsomeusefulandafewimportantthingsfortheAlliedcause,butitschieftains inspiredonlylimitedrespect.Thestimulusofwarwouldgenerateanintelligencerevolution,andgive birthtooneofBritain’smostdazzlingachievements.However,thisdidnottakeplaceinBroadway Buildings,butinsteadoutsideadrearysuburbantowninBedfordshire. 3 TH E R US S I A NS : TEM P LES O F ES P I O NA GE Justbeforenoonon23May1938,PavelSudoplatovoftheNKVDstrolledintotheAtlantarestaurant inRotterdamandgreetedaUkrainiannationalistleaderwhomhehadcometoknowwell,intheguise ofbeingasympathiserwiththeman’scause.Sudoplatov,newlyarrivedonamerchantshipfrom Murmansk,presentedthemanwithahandsomeboxofchocolatesadornedwiththeUkrainiancrest. Thetwochattedforafewmomentstoarrangeafurtherrendezvous,thenMoscow’sagentbadehis companionfarewellandmovedon.Hewasasafedistancedownthestreetbythetimehehearda sharpexplosion.Atimingdevicehaddetonatedabombinsidethebox,killingthenationalist.This wasatypicalMoscowCentre*operationoftheperiod,onethrustintherelentlesscampaignto liquidatestateenemies,realorsupposedtraitors.Sudoplatov’ssuccessearnedhimafour-hour meetingwithStalin’sforemostsecretpoliceman,LavrentiBeria,whomarkedhimforbiggerthings, suchasmanagingtheassassinationofLeonTrotsky. TheSovietUnionownedthemostactiveandbest-resourcedintelligenceorganisationsintheworld –theRedArmy’sGRUandtheNKVD,thelattercontrolledbyBeriafromDecember1938.The foremostpurposesofJosephStalin,masteroftheKremlin,werethepromotionofsocialismabroad throughtheCominternandthemaintenanceofhisownpoweragainstdomesticandforeignenemies. Bothrequiredspiesinprofusion.Throughoutthe1930s,Russiapursuedastrategymorefar-reaching initsmeans–theplantationofdeep-penetrationagents–anditsends–theworldwidetriumphof communism–thanthoseofanyothernation.Howfarthefundsandenergylavishedonitssecretwar profitedtheSovietUnionwillbeconsideredbelow.Here,itsufficestosaythattheespionage networksitestablishedintheUS,Britain,JapanandEuropewereonascalefarbeyondthoseofany othernation,andmanifestedinbigthingsandsmall.WhenJapanesepolicearrestedaSovietagent carryingaLeicacamera,Tokyo’sintelligenceofficerswerepatheticallyenvious:theycouldnot affordtoequiptheirownspieswithtechnologyremotelysosophisticated.Thiswasatimewhentens ofmillionsofRussianswerestarving,yetStalin’sagentsspentwhateverseemednecessaryto purchaseinformationandthedeathsofenemies.FromSwitzerlandtoMexicotheyleftroadsides studdedwithcorpses,andcreatedsomeofthemostremarkableagentnetworksinthehistoryof intelligence. TheRussianaddictiontoespionageandconspiracywasasoldastime.In1912,whenaccordingto officialfiguresGermanyspent£80,387onitssecretservice,France£40,000andBritain£50,000,the Russiansavowedabudgetof£380,000,plusafurther£335,000forthetsar ’ssecretpolice.Tsarist codebreakersachievedsomenotablecoups,andtheirsuccessorssustainedthetradition.Inthe1930s theNKVD’sFourthDepartment,theworld’smostlavishly-fundedsignalsintelligenceunit,wasbased intheForeignAffairsbuildingonMoscow’sKuznetskybridge.Itschief,GlebIvanovitchBokii, achievedareputationasakillerandsexualpredatormatchingthatofBeria.ThoughBokii’steam neverbrokewartimeGermanEnigmamessages,itenjoyedusefulearlierandlessersuccesses,such assecuringthesecretprotocoltothe1936Anti-CominternPactbetweenGermanyandJapan,before itschieffacedafiringsquadthefollowingyear.Stalinpersonallyreadmanydecrypts;likeChurchill later,hetrustedthecodebreakers’productasheneverdidhumint.TheKremlindisplayedasbrutala carelessnessaboutcasualtiesamongitsspiesasitdidtowardsthefateofitssoldiers.In1936 FrantišekMoravecofCzechintelligencereceivedaSovietproposalthathisserviceshouldprovide crashespionagetrainingforahundredRussians,whowouldthenbedispatchedintoGermany. Moravecexpostulatedthatsuchnoviceswouldfacewholesaleextinction.HisMoscowcontact shrugged:‘Inthatcase,weshallsendanotherhundred.’ TheSovietUnionenjoyedacriticaladvantageinbuildingitsempireofespionage.Whilefascism gainedmillionsofsupportersinGermany,ItalyandSpain,itnevermatchedtheappealofworldwide communismduringthedecadesbeforethelatter ’sbloodstainedrealitywaslaidbare.Ineverynation, menandwomenofbrainsandeducation,loftyidealsandunboundednaïvetéqueuedtobetraytheir ownsocieties’secretsforwhattheydeemedahighercause.FromMoscow,hundredsofmenand womenweresentforthtodirectnetworksinJapanandtheUnitedStates,Germany,Franceandother Europeannations.TheNKVDachievedexcellentpenetrationoftheFrenchForeignOffice,and frequentlyquoteditsambassadors’dispatches.Manyofitsinformantsdeludedthemselvesthatthey werepassingsecretsnottotheSoviets,butinsteadtotheComintern–whichwasintruthmerelya postboxfortheKremlin. PavelSudoplatovbecameoneoftheprincipalpuppeteersoftheKremlin’sdansesmacabres.He wasaUkrainianmiller ’sson,bornin1907,whoservedasacipherclerkwiththeRedArmybefore joiningtheBolsheviksecurityservice.Asateenager,Sudoplatovrananetworkofinformersinhis hometownofMelitopol.Secretpoliceworkbecameafamilyaffairwhenhemarriedin1928,since hisJewishwifeEmmawasamoreseniorofficerthanhimselfintheOGPU,forerunneroftheNKVD. HewastrainedbyitsforeigndepartmentbeforebeingpostedtoGermanyasan‘illegal’,posingasa Ukrainiannationalist.Heledarovinglifeintheyearsthatfollowed,travellingacrossEuropeand spendingamonthinaHelsinkijail.Hesawhiswifejustonce,whensheturnedupinParisasa courier.In1938hevisitedSpain,describingitscivilwaras‘akindergartenforourfuture operations’.AtanearlystageofhisrelationshipwithBeria,Sudoplatovnotedacuriosity:thismost terribleofSovietsecretpolicemendisplayedmeticulouscivilitytolittlepeople–juniorstaff–while treatingbigones–hisrivalsintheKremlinhierarchy–withlaceratingrudeness.‘Beriahadthe singularabilitytoinspirebothfearandenthusiasm,’hewrote. Sudoplatovbecameoneofthespychief’smostdevotedservants,graduatingfromfieldworkto seniordeskroles,assistedbythedemiseofrivals.Between1937and1939,thousandsofintelligence officersofallranksdiedbeforefiringsquadsorweredispatchedtothegulag.Stalinlashedoutatthe intelligenceservicesduringameetingoftheSovietMilitaryCouncilinlanguagethatdefiedparody: ‘Wehavedefeatedthebourgeoisieonallfronts.Itisonlyontheintelligencefrontthattheybeatus likesmallboys.Thisisourchiefweakness…Ourmilitaryintelligenceservice…hasbeenpolluted byspies.[Itschiefs]wereworkingforGermany,forJapan,Poland,foranyonebutus…Ourtaskis torestoretheintelligenceservice.Itisoureyesandears.’Inhismadness,Stalininsisteduponnot merelytheexecutionofscoresofseniorofficersoftheGRUandNKVD,butalsoontheseveranceof MoscowCentre’srelationswiththeirinformantsinthefield,thousandsofwhomwerebrandedas fasciststool-pigeons.Thechaosthatfollowedimpactedvariouslyupondifferentdepartmentsand regions,butparalysedsomenetworksuntil1941andbeyond.AfterthedestructionofNazism,in ViennaaveteranNKVDofficermetanoldGermansource,oneofmanywithwhomhehadbroken contactinaccordancewithordersbackin1938.Now,thismandemandedoftheRussian:‘Whereon earthwereyouallthroughthewar?IwasGeneralKesselring’spersonalorderly!’ AmongtheforemostoftheNKVD’soverseasagent-runnerswasTheodoreMaly,aHungarianwho inhisyouthhadbelongedtoaCatholicmonasticorder.HewastakenprisonerasaHapsburgofficer in1916,joinedtheBolsheviksandforsworeGod.In1936MalywaspostedtoLondon,wheremany ofMoscow’sBritishinformantslatertestifiedtotheirrespectandaffectionforhim.Yetin1938he wasamongthoserecalledtoMoscowandshotasasupposedtraitor,alongwiththeNKVD’sequally talentedRomeresidentandseveralofitsBerlinmen.Anobviousquestionpersists:whydidany officerwithabrainobeytheordertogohome,whentheycouldsurelyhavereadtherunes?Themost plausibleansweristhateveninthosecrazedandbloodydays,adherentstotheworldsocialistideal, suchasMalywas,cherishedalingeringfaithintheSovietsystem,thoughhealsoprofessedfatalism ifhisdeathwasdecreed. ManyRussiankneesquakedduringthePurges.Thirty-nineseniorGRUofficers,intelligence veterans,areknowntohavebeenshot,andtheNKVDsufferedinproportion.PavelSudoplatov survivedaninvestigationandthethreatofexpulsionfromtheParty;hebelievedafterwardsthathe mighthavebeenpreservedbyStalin’spersonalintervention.Clamberingoveramoundofcorpses, heacquiredhisownofficeintheLubyankabuildingat2LStreet–cosilyreferredtobyitsoccupants as‘DomDva’,‘NumberTwo’,aplaceofdreadforeverypasser-by,andforanyprisonerwho crosseditsthreshold.LikeallthosewhoprosperedinStalin’sdreadfuluniverse,Sudoplatovlearned toregardthegrotesqueasnormal,theunspeakableasfamiliar.Duringfamilyconversationsintheir apartment,forinstance,heandEmmaneverdeviatedfromarigidlydomesticscript,becausethey tookitforgrantedthateverywordspokenwasrecordedbyBeria’seavesdroppers.Hewrotelong afterwardsinanapparentlyhalf-truthfulmemoir:‘Iacceptedthebrutalityandsternorderthat characterisedourcentralisedsociety;itappearedtheonlymethodofpreservingthecountrywhenit wassurroundedbyGerman,PolishandJapaneseenemies.’ Meanwhile,elsewhereintheforestanagentoftheGRU,whowouldlaterbecomefamous,or notorious,forhisassociationwiththeGermanRedOrchestra–theextraordinaryespionagenetwork tobedescribedlater–wasputtingdownrootsinforeignparts.AnatoliSukolov-Gourevitch,bornat KharkovinNovember1913,wasthesonofJewishparentswhowerebothpharmacists.Hestarted workin1929asanapprenticedraughtsmaninafactory,andhatedthelife.Fromanearlystage,and likemostSovietcitizens,heacquiredthehabitofobsessivesecrecy,writinginhismemoirs:‘I learnedtohidemyfeelingsandtroublesfrommynearestanddearest,myfriends,andindeedfrom everyone.’Desperatetoescapefromthecommonruck,whilestillveryyounghebecamea communistfunctionary,andsomehowsecuredanappointmentasalectureronmilitarystudiesata LeningradschoolforIntouristguides,thereafterservinginintelligence. In1937hewasrecruitedtotraveltoSpainasoneoftheSovietmilitarygroupassistingthe embattledRepublicangovernment.GourevitchthoroughlyenjoyedhissubsequentSpanishadventures –aswhowouldnot,aftersamplingSovietfactorylife?Hewasabletodresswithanelegance unimaginableathome,andthereafterfavouredaWarsawtailor.Hetookatripinasubmarine, travelledinFranceandlearnedconversationalFrench,SpanishandGerman.Onreturningto Moscow,hewasselectedfortrainingasaforeignagentoftheGRU.Askedmuchlaterifithad troubledhimtojointheSovietUnion’smurderoussecretservices,likeSudoplatovheshruggedthat hiscountrywasencircledbyenemies;hethenbelievedthatitsdefendersdidonlywhattheyhadto. Hischief,thegaunt,jug-earedintelligenceveteranMajorSimonGendin,enquiredwhetherhehad anymarriageplanswhichcouldcomplicatehisfuturecareeroverseas.Gourevitchrepliedthathewas indeedinlove,withagirlnamedLialiawhomhehadmetwhentheywerebothworkinginSpain,and whowasnowanIntouristinterpreter.Gendintoldhisstafftoaddhernametothebrieflistof intimateswithwhomGourevitchmightcorrespond,thoughthatrelationshipperished,likesomuch else,duringtheyearsthatfollowed.OngraduationfromtheGRU’sspyschool,Gourevitchhimself expresseddoubtsabouthisfluencyasacoderandwireless-operator–helackedasensitiveearfor Morse.Gendinreassuredhim:hewouldnotneedspecialisedradioskills,forhewasdestinedto becomeanintelligence-gathererandagent-runner. GourevitchwasbriefedtotraveltoBrusselstoworkwithanotherSovietagent,codenamed‘Otto’, thentomoveontoSwedenafterestablishinghimselfandimprovinghislanguageskills.Hewould exploithisknowledgeofSpanishbyadoptingacoveridentityas‘VincenteSierra’,aprosperous businessmanwithaUruguayanpassport.Forthenextthreeyears,Moscowfurnishedhimwithfunds tosustainanappropriatelyflashylifestyle.Yetalthoughhewasinstructedabouttheimportanceof dressingsmartly,affectingthehatandglovesthatwerethenbadgesofbourgeoisrespectability, Gourevitchlatercomplainedthathewasuntutoredinsocialskills.Whenhecheckedintoasmart HelsinkihotelonthefirstlegofhisjourneytoBelgium,hewasbewilderedwhenaporterpickedup hissuitcaseandcarrieditupstairs:neverinhisshortlifehadhereceivedsuchapersonalservice.He gaspedonseeinganopenbuffetinthehoteldining-room,whichatfirstheassumedwassetfora banquetratherthanforthedailyfareofguests.Later,inBrussels,ashefumbledhiswaytowardsan entréeintorelativelysmartsocialcircles,hewasembarrassedtobetakenasideoneeveningbyan acquaintancewhotoldhimthatonlywaitersworewhitebowtieswithsmokingjackets.‘Iwas completelyignorantofthesesubtleties,’hewroteruefully. ‘Otto’,theSovietagentwhomGourevitchjoinedinBrussels,wasLeopoldTrepper,bornin1904 thesonofaGalicianshopkeeper,oneofthekeyfiguresinRussia’sEuropeanintelligenceoperations, andlateraheroicSovietlegend.Asayoungman,TrepperranaParisnetworkwhichwasrolledup bytheFrenchin1933.HefledfirsttoGermany,thentoRussiawherehefoundemploymentwith Stalin’sspymasterswhilemoonlightingaseditorofaJewishjournal.Earlyin1939hewasdispatched toBrussels,whichwasdeemedasecurebasefromwhichhecouldforwardinformationfromthe GRU’snetworkinsideGermany.CentreboastedofrunningtwoimportantBerlinagents:IlseStöbe, whoworkedinthepressdepartmentofRibbentrop’sForeignMinistry,andadiplomatnamedRudolf Shelia.TreppercarriedaCanadianpassportinthenameofAdamMikler,stolenduringtheSpanish CivilWar.Hewasmarriedwithtwosons,butonlyoneaccompaniedhimtoBrussels–theother, seven-year-oldMichael,remainedinMoscow.TrepperbecameknowntohissourcesinWestern Europeas‘legrandchef’,whileGourevitchwas‘lepetitchef’.Sovietnarrativeslavishpraiseonthe Treppernetworkforitsservicestothesocialistcause,anditwasplainlyusefulasapostofficeforthe messagesofStöbeandMikler.ButitseemsunlikelythatTrepperrecruitedusefulinformantsofhis own.TheforemostachievementoftheGRUagentsinBelgiumwastostayatliberty,makesome friendsandcreatelifestylesthatsupportedtheircoverstories. OfmoreimportancetoMoscow–certainlyfrom1941onwards–weretheGRU’sorganisations basedinSwitzerland.ThesewouldlaterchanneltowardstheKremlinmaterialderivedfromBerlin sourcessuchasWesternagent-runnerscouldonlydreamof.Onenetworkhadbeenestablishedin 1937byGerman-bornRachelDübendorfer.Alargergroup,whichbecameknownasthe‘Lucy’Ring, wasrunbyDrAlexanderRadó–‘Dora’–a‘sleeper ’permittedbyhischiefstoslumberalmostas longasSleepingBeauty.AHungarian,Marxistfromhisyouth,Radóservedasacommissarin Budapest’s1919RedTerror.ObligedtofleewhenAdmiralHorthybecameHungary’sdictator,fora timeherananémigréResistancegroupinVienna.HethendecampedtoMoscow,wherehereceived intelligencetraining,andwasdeemedsufficientlysignificanttobeintroducedtoLenin.Postedto WesternEurope,heservedasanagentinBerlinandParis,undercoverasacorrespondentforthe SovietnewsagencyTASS.AftermarryingaGermancommunistwithwhomhehadtwochildren,he triedtosettleinBrussels,butwassentpackingbytheauthorities,whoheldathickdossieronhim. InsteadhewenttoSwitzerland,whereheparleyedalifelongpassionformapsintothecreationofa cartographicpublishingbusiness,whichquicklybecameprofitable. TheSwisspolicewatchedRadóforawhile,thenlefthimalonewhentheydecidedhewaswhathe seemed–aquiet-livingfellow,fortyin1939,whosimplywantedtoturnanhonestpenny.Radówas word-paintedbyoneofhiswireless-operators,anEnglishmannamedAlexanderFoote:‘Withhis mildeyesblinkingbehindglasses,helookedexactlylikealmostanyonetobefoundinanysuburban trainanywhereintheworld.’MoscowinstructeditsmantodonothinguntilEuropeerupted.Radó settleddownquitehappilywithhismaps,whichenabledhimtomakealivingwithoutmuchrecourse toGRUfunds.WhenhishandlerwasrecalledtoMoscowduringthePurges,Radóforatimelost contactwithhischiefs.Buthemadeusefullocalfriends,someofthemcommunists,othersnot.One wasaSwisssocialist,OttoPunter,whoadmiredtheSovietUnionandhadworkedfortheRepublicans inSpain.PunterforgedconnectionsinGermany,andwithsomeGermanémigrésinSwitzerlandsuch asBaronMichelvonGodin.VonGodinrecruitedtheVichyFrenchpressattaché,LouisSuss, codename‘Salter ’.TheChinesepressattachéPaoHsienChu–‘Polo’–wasanothersource,and PunteralsohadconnectionswithinfluentiallocalCatholics. Radó’scomradeAlexanderFootealwaysclaimedtohavebeenanadventurerratherthana communistideologue.Around-faced,bespectacled,mildlyseedyyoungEnglishman,inSeptember 1938hereturnedfromserviceinSpainwiththeInternationalBrigade.Afewmonthslater,oneof Moscow’sBritishrecruitersofferedhimunspecifiednewemploymentfortheworkers’causein Switzerland.Cheapmelodramawasnotlacking.Inobediencetoinstructions,Footereportedtothe mainpostofficeinGenevaatnoononeday,wearingawhitescarfandholdingaleatherbelt.Hewas approachedbyawomanwhofulfilledhersideoftheidentificationprocedurebyholdingastring shoppingbagandanorange.SheaskedinEnglishwherehehadboughthisbelt,andhereplied implausibly,atanironmonger ’sshopinParis.Whenhehadthenaskedwherehecouldbuyanorange likehers,sheintroducedherself.Shewas‘Sonya’,UrsulaHamburger*oftheGRU,whomFootewas pleasedtofindwasnosquatcommissar,butinsteadanattractivewomanofthirty-one,with‘agood figureandevenbetterlegs’.ThisremarkablepersonalitywasthedaughterofaBerlineconomist.At theageofelevenshewasbrieflyachildactressbeforetakingupanalternativecareerinespionage. ShewasalreadyaveteranofexploitsinChinaforwhichshehadbeenawardedtheOrderoftheRed Banner. HamburgerinstructedFootetotraveltoMunich,establishhimselfinthecity,learnGermanand makefriends.Hewasgiven2,000Swissfrancsandtoldtomeetheragaininthreemonthsin Lausanne–onceagain,atthepostoffice.KeepingthisrendezvousafteraGermansojournthatwas uneventfulsaveforachanceglimpseofHitlerlunchinginarestaurant,hewastoldthathewasnow ontheGRUpayrollasa‘collaborator ’,atasalaryofUS$150amonthplusreasonableexpenses. Giventhecovername‘Jim’,andvariousmeansofmakingcontactif‘Sonya’disappearedforany reason,hewasthensentbacktoMunichwithanadvanceofUS$900incash.Nothingsignificant happenedthereafteruntilinApril1939hewasvisitedbyanoldInternationalBrigadecomradefrom Spain,LenBrewer,British-bornsonofGermanparents,whomheappearstohaveintroducedto Hamburger,whopromptlyrecruitedhim.InAugusthewassummonedtoyetanothermeeting,this timeatHamburger ’shome,achaletatCaux-sur-Montreuxwhereshelivedinincongruousbourgeois domesticitywithhertwochildren,MaikandJanina,andanoldGermannurse.Footewasdisconcerted bythecasualnesswithwhichhishostessleftcomponentsofherwirelesstransmitterlyingaroundthe house. TheGRUringinSwitzerlandwasastraumatisedasmanyothercommunistsaroundtheworldby theAugust1939Nazi–SovietPact.FootefeltthatithitHamburgerevenharderthanhimself;thather faithintheomniscienceofthePartywasshattered:‘Ithinkthatfromthattimeonwardsherheartwas notinthework’–thisseemsimplausible,sinceshelaterbecamecourierfortheatomicspyKlaus Fuchs,anddiedanavowedStalinist.DesperatetogetoutofSwitzerland,shedivorcedherhusband andmarriedLenBrewer.Initially,accordingtoFoote,thiswasmerelyanarrangementof conveniencetosecurea‘shoe’–apassport–butthenthecouplefellinlove.Theirplanswere momentarilythreatenedwhentheirmaid,Lisa,becamedisaffectedandtelephonedtheBritish consulatetodenouncethemanonymouslyascommunistspies.Butthegirl’sEnglishwassopoorthat nobodyattheotherendunderstood,oratleasttooknotice. Daysbeforetheoutbreakofwar,FooteboardedatrainboundforGermanyoncemore,onlyto findhishandlersuddenlypushingherwayalongthecarriagetoreachhim,justbeforedeparturetime. Shetoldhimtogetoff,fast.NewordershadcomefromMoscow:warwasimminent;hemuststayin Switzerland.Duringtheperiodthatfollowed,inwhichthe‘Lucy’Ringwastemporarilydormant, whilelivingatasmallpensioninMontreuxbothFooteandLenBrewerlearnedhowtooperatea shortwaveradiotransmitter.TheypractisedonHamburger ’sset,thoughitsperformancewasnot improvedbybeingburiedinhergardenbetweentransmissions–thenwaitedtobegivenmessagesto transmittoMoscow. EvenastheGRU’sSwissnetworkswerebeddingdown,Centre’sGermansourceswerealready producinginformationofextraordinaryquality.Thefirstmusicianinwhatbecameknowntohistory asthe‘RedOrchestra’wasrecruitedfollowinganapproachtotheSovietembassyonedayin1929,by anex-BerlinpolicemannamedErnstKur.Heofferedhisservicesasaninformant,andwaspromptly recruitedbythelocalNKVDresidentasagentA/70.Kur,aracketyandoftendrunkenboor,hadbeen dismissedfromthepolice,butprovedtohaveacriticalcontactinitscounter-intelligencebranch,who wassoondesignatedbytheRussiansasagentA/201.On7SeptemberMoscowmessageditsBerlin station:‘Weareveryinterestedinyournewagent,A/201.Ouronlyfearisthatyouhavegot yourselvesintooneofthemostdangerouspredicamentswheretheslightestindiscretiononthepart ofeitherA/201orA/70couldleadtomultiplemisfortunes.Wethinkitnecessarytolookintothe issueofaspecialchannelofcommunicationwithA/201.’InvestigationshowedthatitwasA/201–an officernamedWillyLehmann,whohadpromptedKur ’sapproachtotheRussians,usinghimasacutoutduringtheirexploratorydealings. Lehmannwasbornin1884,andservedtwelveyearsintheKaiser ’snavybeforebecominga policeman.HisNKVDfilespokeinthehighesttermsofhischaracter,thoughnotingtheexistenceof along-termmistress,FlorentinaLiverskaya,athirty-eight-year-oldseamstresswholivedandworked at21Blumenstrasse.Shewasdescribed,somewhatungenerously,asashortwomanwithreddishhair andaplumpface.WhenKurstartedusinghispaymentsfromtheSovietembassytofundextravagant drinkingsprees,Lehmannandhishandleragreedthatthisnowredundantintermediarymustbegot outoftheway.WithunusualsensitivityforCentre,insteadofbeingpushedunderatram,in1933the dissoluteex-copwasrehousedinSweden,wherehepassedtherestofhisdaysasasmalltrader, occasionallymoonlightingasaninformant. Lehmann,codenamed‘Breitenbach’,thereafterbecameoneofMoscow’smostvaluedGerman agents.ForsometimehishandlerwasVasilyZarubin,anNKVDstar.Bornin1894,highlyintelligent andpersonablethoughlargelyself-educated,ZarubinservedsuccessivelyinChinaandEuropeasan ‘illegal’,latterlyundercoverasaCzechengineer.Acheerfullygregariousfigure,thoughwithample bloodonhishands,hespokeseverallanguagesandforgedawarmrelationshipwithLehmann. AlthoughZarubinoccasionallygavethepolicemanmodestsumsofmoney,Lehmannneverappeared greedy,andseemedkeentoassisttheRussianssimplybecausehedislikedhisownnation’s government–ananimositythatbecamemuchmoremarkedaftertheNazisgainedpower. LehmanngaveMoscowdetailsaboutthestructureandactivitiesofGermany’svariousintelligence organisations,andwarnedofforthcomingoperationsagainstSovietinterests.Heprovidedsamples ofAbwehrcodes,andpassedongossipaboutNazipowerstruggles.Hehimselfworkedlatterlyinthe Gestapo’sDepartmentIVE,ultimatelyunderHimmler ’scontrol,andwasmaderesponsiblefor securityatespeciallysensitivedefenceplants.Thusin1935heattendedsomeearlyGermanrocket testsatPeenemünde,andproducedareportonthemwhichreachedStalin.Healsoacquired considerableinformationaboutothermilitaryandnavaltechnologicaldevelopments.AstheNazis tightenedtheirgripduringthe1930s,LehmannbecameincreasinglynervousaboutmeetingZarubin, orindeedanySovietagent.Hefoundhimselfundersurveillance,asaresultofabizarrecoincidence. Awomanquarrelledwithherlover,anddenouncedhimtotheauthoritiesasaRussianspy:this provedtobeanotherGestapoofficer,alsonamedLehmann.Themuddlewaseventuallyclearedup, andtheshadowwasliftedfrom‘Breitenbach’.Butin1935heaskedforafalsepassportincasehehad toruninahurry,andthiswasdulyprovided.WhenZarubinreportedthatLehmannhadfallen seriouslyill,thenewspromptedapanicinMoscow:CentredeclaredthatitsmostpreciousGerman sourcemustbekeptaliveatanycost,andthattheNKVDwouldmeethismedicalbillsifthemoney couldsomehowbelaundered.‘Breitenbach’recovered. LaterthatyeartheGRUmadeasuddendecisiontowindupitsGermannetworksamidtheNazis’ ruthlesspersecutionofknowncommunists,andtomakeafreshstart,beginningatthetop.Boththe BerlinstationchiefandhisdeputywererecalledtoMoscowandliquidated.Earlyin1937,the NKVD’sZarubinalsofellvictimtothePurges.Hewassummonedhome,andataninterviewwith Beriaaccusedoftreason.Afterinterrogation,unusuallyhewasneitherexecutednorcleared,but insteaddemoted.HeremainedforatimeinMoscow,servingasassistanttoanoviceintelligence officer,VladimirPavlov. BeforeZarubin’sabruptdeparturefromBerlin,hetransferredthehandlingof‘Breitenbach’toa womannamedClemens,oneofhisstaff.ShescarcelyspokeGerman,buttherewasnobodyelse,and hehimselfexpectedsoontoreturn.Asmattersfellout,Clemenswasobligedtoassumeongoing responsibilityfortherelationship,exchangingenvelopescontainingordersandinformation,which werethenpassedtoanotherNKVDillegal,Ruben,whosoonfoundhimselfthesolesurviving memberoftheBerlinstationasthePurgesclaimedevermorevictims–theGRU’sMajorSimon Gendin,whohadsentGourevitchtoBrussels,wasshotinFebruary1939. Zarubin,inMoscow,contrivedtosendanoteto‘Breitenbach’,assuringhimthathewasnot forgottenbyhisfriends;thatheshouldcontinuehisintelligenceactivities,whileexercisingextreme caution.TheGestapoofficerreplied:‘Ihavenoreasonstoworry.Iamsurethatthey[inMoscow Centre]alsoknowovertherethateverythingisbeingdoneresponsiblyhere,everythingthatcanbe done.Sofarthereisnogreatneedforanyonetovisitfromthere.Iwillinformyouifthiswill becomenecessary.’AstheNKVD’ssilencebecameprotracted,however,Lehmanngrewfrustrated andimpatient.HesentanothermessagetoZarubinviaClemens:‘JustwhenIwasabletomakegood deals,thecompanytherestoppedbeinginterestedindoingbusinesswithme,forcompletelyunknown reasons.’Zarubinrespondedsoothinglythat‘thecompany’tremendouslyvaluedhiswork,and besoughthimtokeepgoing–whichhedid,untilNovember1938.Butthen,astheSovietintelligence machinebecameparalysedbyitsdomesticcontortions,allcontactbetween‘Breitenbach’and Moscowwaslost:therelationshipwasnotrestoreduntiltheautumnof1940. WillyLehmannwasbynomeansMoscow’sonlyGermansource,norevenanylongeritsmost important.Onedayin1935aLuftwaffeofficernamedHarroSchulze-Boysen,whoheldaseniorpost inHermannGöring’sAirMinistry,contactedtheSovietembassyinBerlinwithanofferof information,whichwasimmediatelyaccepted.Hewasgiventhecodename‘Corporal’,andNKVD file34122.Schulze-BoysenwasachampagnesocialistfromasmartBerlinfamilyofintellectual inclinations–AdmiralTirpitzwasamonghisforebears.FromhisdeskintheAirMinistryheforged contactsinarmystaffcommunications,amongAbwehrofficers,andalsowithHansHenniger,a governmentinspectorofLuftwaffeequipment.Göringgaveawaythebrideathis1936wedding,to thebeautifulandexuberantLibertasHaas-Heye,whohadworkedforatimeasaBerlinpressofficer forMGMFilms.ShenowlearnedtoshareSchulze-Boysen’spoliticalconvictionsandtheburdenof hislaboursfortheSovietUnion,andherbedwithalegionoflovers. Ataboutthesametime,butindependently,aseniorcivilservantintheeconomicsministry,Arvid Harnack,contactedtheSovietembassy,andwaslikewiserecruitedasagent‘Corsican’,NKVDfile 34118.Harnackwasbornin1901intoascholarlyfamilyinDarmstadt.Hequalifiedasalawyerand practisedasaneconomist,spendingsometimeintheUnitedStates.AttheUniversityofWisconsin’s MadisoncampushemetMildredFish,astrikinglyhandsomeandserious-mindedstudentofEnglish. Theyweremarriedin1929,andelectedtoliveinGermany.BothwerekeenlyinterestedinMarxism– theymadeatouroftheSovietUnion,andin1932launchedapoliticalstudygroup.WhenArvid begantopassinformationtotheRussians,andtorecruitfellow-foesofHitlertohisring,hejoined theNaziPartytoimprovehisprotectivecolouring.MeanwhilebothheandSchulze-Boysensteadily extendedtheirgroupsoflike-mindedintellectualfoesofHitler.Betweenthem,by1939theyhad openedwindowsintosomeofthemostinfluentialinstitutionsinNaziGermany. Moscownowmadeaserioussecuritymistake:itorderedthatthetwonetworksshouldcollaborate. Theirguidingspiritshadverydifferenttemperaments.Schulze-Boysenwasanexuberant,impulsive extrovert;Harnackwasaquiet,intenseintellectual,whoseimpeccablemiddle-classbackground enabledhimselfandhisfriendsforyearstoescapetheattentionoftheGestapoandtheAbwehr.The twomennonethelessforgedacloserelationship,drivenbysharedhatredoftheNazisandromantic enthusiasmfortheSovietUnion.UntilJune1941theyhadnoneedofwirelesses,merelytransmitting informationthroughtheRussians’Berlinmilitaryattaché. Oneofthemoststrikingaspectsofespionageisthatitsprocesses,themerebusinessoflivinga covertexistence,acquirealifeoftheirown,heedlessofspies’achievementsascollectorsof information.AnatoliGourevitch,inhismemoirs,touchesonaweaknessinhisowntrainingwhich mightbeappliedtotheexperienceofmanyotheragents.Hewasexhaustivelyinstructedintechniques –secretinks,passwordsforrendezvousandsuchlike.Nomatchingeffort,however,wasexpended uponexplainingthepurposeofhismission:‘WhywassolittleheedpaidtothemeansbywhichI mightobtaininformation,tothewholeorganisationalaspectofthebusinessofintelligencegathering?’Inotherwords,andasGourevitch’ssubsequentcareerillustrated,formanysecretagents themanagementandperilsofdailyexistenceconsumedalion’sshareoftheirenergies,often overwhelmingthefunctionthatmattered–theacquisitionofinformationofvaluetotheirserviceand itsgovernment. ArrivedinBrusselsearlyin1939,freshfromtheGRUtrainingschool,Gourevitchtookroomsin alodginghouse,enrolledhimselfinalanguageschoolinhisguiseasaUruguayanvisitor,and reflectedthathisownabsoluteignoranceofcommerceseemedlikelytoproveanimpedimenttohis intendedcoverlife,helpingtorunalocallybasedbusiness.Thisconcernreceded,however,inthe faceofamoreseriousone:disillusionmentonfirstmeetinghisboss,LeopoldTrepper.Gourevitch hadforgedaheroicmentalimageofthissecretagentsomuchesteemedbyMoscowCentre,yetnow hewasconfrontedbywhatheafterwardsclaimedwasadrab,unimposingreality.Hehadbeenbriefed tosupposethatasolidbusinesscoverhadbeenestablishedfor‘Otto’s’networkinBelgium,whereas onthespothefoundonlyalittlesuburbanexportbusinessemployingjustthreepeopleandpeddling ‘theForeignExcellentTrench-Coat’.ItssecretarywasayoungRussianémigré,marriedtoaformer tsaristarmyofficer,whowasapparentlycompletelyignorantoftherealnatureofthefirm’s operations.AllthemanagerswereJews,whichmustmaketheminstantlyvulnerableintheeventofa GermantakeoverofBelgium. Gourevitchfeltmoreconfidenceinhisfellow-agent‘Andre’,athirty-five-year-oldAlsatiannamed LeonGrossvogel,whohaddesertedfromtheFrencharmyin1925,thendriftedaroundGermany beforetravellingtoPalestine,wherehebecameacommunist,andforgedafriendshipwithTrepper. AfterthreeyearstherehereturnedtoBelgium,wherehisparentslivedandranasmalltradinghouse named‘AuRoi’.ItwasthepresenceoftheGrossvogelsthatpersuadedTreppertocometoBelgium, andtoexploittheircommercialcontactsasacover,whenin1938Moscowchargedhimwiththe formationofaWestEuropeanespionageorganisation.Hisnewdeputynonethelessdecidedthat Trepper ’ssupposednetworkofimportantintelligencecontactswasnothingofthesort.Whilelarge allowancemustbemadeforthefactthatGourevitchpublishedhisversionlongafterhehimselfwas denouncedasatraitor,thethrustofhisremarksmakessense.WhateverTrepper ’stradecraftskills, togetherwithhisplausibilityincomposingreportswhichfoundfavourinMoscow,itishardto imaginewhatusefulintelligencehecouldhaveacquiredinlow-gradeBelgianandFrenchbusiness circles,theonlysocietythathehadaccessto.CentreseemedcontenttoacceptTrepper ’sclaimtohave createdasystemthroughwhichmaterialcouldbegatheredandpassedtoMoscowfromitsBerlin sourcesintheeventofwarwithGermany.ButGourevitchdismissedas‘completelyfalse’theclaims ofpost-warSoviethistoriansthatTrepperranalargenetworkofimportantagentsextendinginto Scandinavia. Ontheeveofwar,MoscowCentrecouldboastthattheSchulze-Boysen/Harnackgroupsin GermanyprovidedexcellentinformationfromtheNazis’innercircle.The‘Lucy’Ringin Switzerlandhadestablisheditselfsoundly,butonlybegantoprovideimportantintelligencefrom 1941onwards.TheTrepper–Gourevitchnetworkstrodwateruntil1940.TheextensiveSovietsecret machineintheUS,whichwillbedescribedelsewhere,producedasteadystreamoftechnological intelligence,whichwouldhavebeenmoreusefultotheRussiansinadvancingtheirowndefencebase iftheirindustrieshadbeencapableofexploitingit. WehavelefttolastthebestofallMoscow’smen–orrather,themostspectacular.RichardSorge gripstheimaginationofposterity,morebecauseofwhathewasthanthroughhisinfluenceonhistory, whichwasmarginal.HedispatchedtoMoscowaflowofprivilegedpoliticalandstrategic information,acquiredthroughanaccesstohighplacesachievedthroughsheerforceofpersonality. Muchofhismaterialwasignored,however,ormerelyduplicatedsimilarreportsfrommore authoritativeBerlinsources.SomehistorianswhoselectivelyquoteSorge’soccasionalbrilliant insightshaveignoredhismisjudgementsandfalseprophecies–‘noise’.Hischaracterandcareeras anagentwerenonethelessextraordinary. ‘Ika’,asSorgewasnicknamed,wasborninBakuin1895,oneofninechildrenofaGerman petroleumengineerandaRussianmother.AftercompletingschoolinGermanyhefoundhimself thrustintotheKaiser ’swarasayoungsoldier.WhileconvalescinginKönigsbergaftersufferinga badwound,hewasindoctrinatedintocommunistideology,allegedlybythefatherofoneofhis nurses,thoughtherewasalreadyafamilyprecedent:Sorge’sgrandfatherhadbeenanassociateof MarxandEngels.WhenthewarendedhebecameaMarxistinstructor,andacquiredaPhDinpolitical science.In1921hemarriedChristianeGerlach,havingpersuadedhertoabandonaprevioushusband. Hiscommunistandrevolutionarylinksattractedtheunfavourableattentionofthepolice,andhe foundGermanybecomingtoohottoholdhim.In1924thecouplemovedtoMoscow,whereSorge wasrecruitedandtrainedasaSovietagent.Uncertaintypersistsabouthismovementsinthenextfive years,thoughitisknownthathevisitedBritain.Christianelefthim,withouttheformalityofadivorce –hisimmenseappealtowomenmadehimcarelessaboutwhethertheystayedorwent.The combinationofrough-hewngoodlooksandahypnotic,drivenpersonalityenabledhimtoattract,and oftentomaintainintandem,animpressiverangeofloversofallshapesandsizes.Thoughsceptics latercondemnedSorgeasacharlatanaswellasabetrayer–afundamentallyshallowfiguredespite hisintellectualpretensions–hewasastrikinglysuccessfulone. In1929theRedArmy’sFourthDepartment–latertheGRU–offeredhimanoverseasassignment. HerequestedChina,andarrivedinShanghaithatNovemberundercoverasafreelancejournalist, withawireless-operatorintow.HeachievedrapidsocialsuccessintheEuropeanconcessions,and madewell-informedfriends.Alsoagents.HehimselfwasmasqueradingasanAmerican,butdropped theposewithAgnesSmedley,theAmericanChinatraveller,whomheenlistedinMoscow’sservice. In1930hemettwenty-nine-year-oldHotsumiOzaki,astrugglingmagazinewriterwithcommunist sympathies,whomhealsorecruitedandwhoplayedanotablepartinhissubsequentcareer.Like almostallthosewhoworkedwithhim,Ozakifellundertheforeigner ’sspell.Longafterwards, anotherofhisJapanesenetworksaidwonderinglyofthesuperspythatSorgebecame,‘Youmeeta manlikehimonlyonceinalifetime.’TheGRUagentthrewhimselfintoresearchingeveryaspectof Chineselife,andhisreportsearnedwarmapprovalfromhischiefs. InJanuary1933hereturnedtoMoscow,wherehe‘married’again:ayoungRussiangirlnamed YekaterinaMaximova–‘Katcha’–towhomhewroteemotionallettersthroughtheyearsthat followed.HehimselfwantedtostayinRussia,butwhatusewasaforeignspyinhisemployers’own country?TheGRUdecidedtoposthimtoTokyo.Inpreparationforthisassignment,Sorgetravelled toGermany,nowNazi-ruled,tosecureappropriatecredentials,andachievedanotherbrilliantsocial andprofessionalsuccess,whilesomehowevadingexposureofhiscommunistpast.Hemetthe publisherofZeitschriftfurGeopolitik,anardentNationalSocialist,andsecuredfromhimbotha contractasa‘stringer ’andaletterofintroductiontotheGermanembassyinTokyo. Healsogainedthegoodwillofthemagazine’sfounder,KarlHaushofer,asecond‘stringing’ arrangementwithTäglischeRundschau,andaletteraddressedtoLt.Col.EugenOtt,aGermanofficer servinganexchangetermwithaJapaneseartilleryregiment.Theeditor-in-chiefurgedOttto‘trust Sorgeineverything;thatis,politically,personallyandotherwise’.Throughthesesponsorsthespy pulledoffafurthercoup:hebecameamemberoftheNationalSocialistParty.Thusarmoured,this avowedNazisetoffforTokyoviatheUnitedStateswithawireless-operator,BrunoWendtoftheRed Army,carryinginhisluggageacopyofthe1933GermanStatisticalYearbooktoprovidethekeyfor hiscoding.Sorgewasthirty-eight,andonthethresholdofoneofthegreatestespionagecareersin history. ArrivedinJapan,withremarkablespeedheestablishedarelationshipwiththeGermanambassador HerbertvonDirksen,aPrussianaristocrat;andamuchcloseronewithColonelOtt,whoembraced anotherformerFrontsoldatenaskin.Sorge,withcharacteristicrecklessness,promptlybeganan affairwithOtt’swifeHelma,anAmazoniansix-footerwhowasherselfaformercommunist.This appearstohavedonenoharmtothespy’srelationshipwithherhusband,whoseemed,ashe remained,mesmerisedbyhisnewfriend.Thecolonelwasanaustereandunbendingfigurewho perhapssawqualitiesinSorgewhichheenvied,notleastexuberance.Thenewcomeralsoingratiated himselfwiththeconvivialandcharmingCaptainPaulWenneker,whojoinedtheGermanmissionin 1934asnavalattaché. Sorge’sintimacywiththeembassywonhimsomerespectandattentionfromtheJapanese,though atthisstagetheTokyogovernmenthadbynomeanscommitteditselftoanalliancewithHitler– Germanresidentsweresubjecttopolicesurveillanceasintrusiveasthatimposedonotherforeigners. Sorgethrewhimselfintoacquiringinformationofallkindsaboutthecountry,itspeople,historyand culture,formingalibraryofoverathousandbooks,thoughheneverlearnedtoreadJapanese,nor eventospeakitwell.Hissexualindiscretionswouldhaveearnedcensureinanyspyschool,buthis managementoftherelationshipwiththeGermandiplomaticcommunityatthecolonnadedand handsomelygardenedembassyofferedamasterclassinpenetration.DespitehisavowedNational Socialistallegiance,hewasgailycriticalofGermangovernmentpolicies. AtmeetingswithDirksenandOtt–whowasnowtransferredtobecomemilitaryattaché–Sorge appearedtoprovideasmuchinformationashereceived.Indeed,theyrecognisedthatthejournalist knewmoreaboutJapanthantheydid.Hestartedtoassistinthecompilationofdiplomaticreportsfor Berlin,andforgedalong-distancerelationshipwiththeeditoroftheNaziPartynewspaper, contributingtoitscolumnsandattendinglocalTokyobranchmeetings.Meanwhile,patientlyand skilfully,SorgebuiltuphisnetworkofinformantsforMoscow.HotsumiOzaki,hisoldfriendand sourcefromShanghai,wasnowarespectedjournalistinOsaka,whencehewasabletotransferto Tokyo.Inthatpre-social-mediauniverse,forthenexttwoyearsSorgewasabletopreventOzaki fromdiscoveringhisrealname:theGermanwasknowntohimonlyas‘MrJohnson’,theAmerican coveridentityhehadworninhisChinadays. Anotherrecruit,YotokuMiyaki,wasapainterbornin1903,whosefamilyhadmovedtoCalifornia whenhewasachild.TheAmericanCommunistPartytalent-spottedMiyakifortheComintern,andthe slightly-builtyoungmanwaspersuadedtomovebacktoJapan,whereheprovedasuperbagent.In keepingwithMoscow’sstringentfinancepolicies,thoughMiyakireceivedasalaryfromSorge,he supplementedthisthroughgivinglanguagelessonsandsellinghispictures,whichcommanded respectableprices.AnotherkeySorgesubordinatewasaYugoslav-bornjournalist,Brankode Voukelitch.TheFourthDepartmentperemptorilyinstructedVoukelitchtostrengthenhiscoverby divorcinghiswifeEdithandmarryingaJapanesewoman.Thisthecompliantagentdulydid, confusinghimselfaswellashisassociatesbyfallingsincerelyinlovewithawell-bornlocalgirl, YoshikoYamasaki,whoeventuallymarriedhim. ItwasareflectionofColonelOtt’sintimacywithSorgethatwhenhetouredManchuriain1934,he tookalongtheRussianspyashiscourierintheNaziinterest.SorgesubsequentlyghostedOtt’sreport tothearmyeconomicdepartment,whichwonplauditsinBerlin.Thefollowingyear,theJapanese policebrokeupanotherSovietspyringinTokyorunbyanAmerican,JohnSherman,adevelopment whichincreasedMoscow’sdependencyonSorge.Heoncesaid,‘Spyingworkmustbedonebravely,’ andindeedhebecameafamousfigureinTokyo’ssocial,journalisticanddiplomaticcircles, careeringaboutthecityonamotorbike,drinkingheroicquantitiesofalcohol,beddingeverywoman withinhisreach.Herentedatwo-storeyJapanese-stylehouseat30NagasakiMachi,andMoscowkept himsuppliedwithsufficientfundstosustaintheracketylifeheloved.Hehadahousekeeperwho becamedevotedtohim,togetherwithamaidandalaundrymanwhowereroutinelyquizzedbythe police.ButeventhepathologicallysuspiciousJapanesehadnocluethatSorgemightbeaspy;they regardedhimmerelyasaninfluentialacolyteoftheNazis. HeperformedadailytourofnewspaperofficesandtheGermanClubbeforemakinghiswaytothe embassy,wherehenowspentsomuchtimethathewasprovidedwithhisownofficeinwhichto conductresearchandpreparematerialfortransmissiontoBerlin;privacywasalsousefulfor photographingdocumentsforMoscow.AGermandiplomatspokelaterofSorgeas‘agay,dissolute adventurerwithabrilliantmindandanunassailableconceit’.Thespywroteamemorablyironicletter tohisMoscow‘wife’Katchain1937:‘itisveryhard,aboveallthissolitude’. ItwasindeedaceaselesschallengefortheSovietagenttosustainamasqueradeasaNazistooge whilehepartiedandwomanised.Intheeveningshefrequentedastringofbarsandclubs– Lohmeyer ’srestaurantintheGinza,whichhadaloyalGermanclientèle;theseedylittleFledermaus; andtheRheingold,whoseproprietorHelmutKetelwasanardentadmirerofHitler.Itwastherethat Sorgemet‘Agnes’,oneofmanybargirlswhofellforhim.Agnesprovedtohavestayingpower.She wastwenty-three,andherrealnamewasHanakoIshii.Shebecameincreasinglyafixtureinhishouse, andhepaidforhertotakelessonstofulfilacherishedambitiontobecomeasinger.ButSorgewas nomorefaithfultoHanakothantoanyotherwoman:heconductedalongparallelrelationshipwith AnitaMohr,wifeofalocallybasedGermanbusinessman,whowasdescribedasa‘blonde bombshell’.Hanakoappearstohaveprovidedaconvenienceratherthananobjectofrealaffection. Sorge’sprioritywasalwaysservicetoMoscow.AstheweightofGRUmaterialincreased,sodid thedifficultiesoftransmittingit.Wendt,hisradioman,wasincompetent,andSorgeinsistedthata bettermanmustbefound.In1935thespyleftTokyo,supposedlyonholiday,boundfortheUnited States.FromtherehetravelledcovertlytotheSovietUnion,toconferwithhischiefsandsortoutthe communicationsissues.InMoscowhewasrebriefedaboutpriorities,foremostamongwhichwasto exploreJapan’sintentionstowardstheSovietUnion.Thereafter,indescendingorderhewasordered tostudytheJapanesearmyandindustry;policiesinChina;positioningtowardsBritainandtheUS. SoonafterSorge’sreturntoTokyo,anewwireless-operatorandcourierjoinedhimfrom Moscow.MaxClausenheldofficer ’srankintheRedArmy.Toprovidecoverheestablisheda blueprint-copyingbusinessinTokyo,whichbecameanotablyprofitablepetproject.Clausen’sfirst intelligencetaskwastobuildhisownwirelessset,commonpracticeamongagentsincountriesto whichitwasdeemedtoodifficultordangeroustodispatchaprofessionallyconstructedone.Heused adomesticradioreceiver,attachedthetransmittertoaBakelitepanelmountedonawoodenbox,and woundtuningcoilsfromcoppertubingintendedformotormanufacture.Intheabsenceof instrumentstomeasurewavelengths,Clausentransmittedona37–39metreband,andreceivedon45– 48. Sorgepersuadedafriendandfellow-journalist,GuntherStein,toallowtheSovietoperatorto messageMoscowfromhisflat.Steininitiallyrecoiledfromacceptingthisappallingrisk,but eventuallyassented.SinceClausendarednotsetupanexternalaerial,hestretchedtwocopperstrandedwires,sevenmetresinlength,aroundtheroomfromwhichhetransmitted.Steinalso becameausefulinformantfortheSorgering,exploitingfriendshipshehadformedattheBritish embassy.SotoodidToraoShinotsuka,ownerofasmallmilitary-equipmentfactoryinKansai,who providedextensivematerialonmilitaryaircraftandnavalarmaments.AnnaClausen,Max’sadored wife,arrivedinTokyofromMoscowtosharethewireless-operator ’shazardousexistence. TheSovietnetwork’smembershipthusexpandedataperiodwhenJapanwasenteringaperiodof paranoiaaboutforeignespionage,andreinforcingitsdomesticsecurityagencies.In1936therewasa badmomentwhenTokyopolicearrestedTaikichiKawaiattherequestoftheirManchurian counterparts.Kawaihadbeenaninformantof‘MrJohnson’inShanghai.Incaptivityhewasbrutally interrogated.Unlikemostagentsundertorture,however,hegaveawaynothingsignificant.Sorge’s luckheld.Hisworkwasgivingthehighestsatisfactiontobothofitsbeneficiaries,MoscowCentre andtheForeignMinistryinBerlin.Thelatterwasespeciallydelightedbyareportwhichhecompiled onthe1936Japanesearmyrevolt,butwhichheinsistedshouldcirculateamongtheNazihierarchy onlyunderthecoyinitials‘RS’,becauseheremainedfearfulofaGestapoinvestigationofhis politicalpast. HehelpedOttandDirksendraftacabletoBerlin,askingforinformationaboutarumoured German–Japanesenegotiation.SorgesoughttopromoteMoscow’sagendabyurgingontheGerman embassyteamtheviewthatsuchanalliancewouldbemistaken,androotedinabsurdrumoursthat Stalin’sfallwasimminent.HepublishedanarticleontheJapanesearmyinDieWehrmachtmagazine. HisreputationwiththeTokyoembassyandwithBerlinsoaredafterthefulfilmentofhisprediction thatJapan’swarinChinawouldproveprotracted.Moreimportant,however,wasthemassof informationaboutJapanesedeploymentsontheSovietborderwhichOttprovidedtoSorge,who swiftlyforwardedittotheGRU.Moscowalsoprofessedappreciationofindustrialdatadeliveredby HotsumiOzakiatmonthlyrestaurantmeetings.Thejournalisthadbecomeinfluentialingovernment circles,andcorrespondinglywell-informed:foratimeheevenservedintheJapaneseprime minister ’sofficeasanexpertonChina.Eventhoughhelostthatrolewhenthegovernmentchanged in1939,hesecuredanewjobasaTokyo-basedresearcherforJapan’sKwantungarmyinManchuria. In1938HerbertvonDirksenwasinvalidedhome.Hissuccessorasambassadorwasnoneother thanColonelOtt.SorgethenceforwardfoundhimselfdraftingtheGermanembassy’sdispatchesfor Berlin,whiletransmittinghisowntoMoscow.Onhisforty-thirdbirthdayhewaspresentedwitha signedphotographofNaziforeignministerJoachimvonRibbentropasatokenofBerlin’s appreciationforhisservices.NoforeignpenetrationofaBritishdiplomaticmissioncouldbe comparedinsignificancewiththatachievedbySorgeofHitler ’sTokyoembassy.WhenaRussian generaldefectedtoTokyoin1938,thespywasimmediatelyabletowarnMoscowthatitscodeswere compromised.InMay1939,whentensionsontheRusso–Japanesebordereruptedintolocalclashes, thankstoOzakiSorgecouldtellMoscowauthoritativelythattheJapanesehadnointentionof escalatingthe‘NomohanIncident’intoawiderwar.Onthisissueasonmanyothers,however,doubts persistabouttheusemadeofhismaterial.SorgesupposedlygavetheSovietsdetailedJapanese order-of-battleinformation,butGeorgiZhukovastheRedArmy’slocalcommandercomplained bitterlyabouttheabsenceofsuchdata.ItseemslikelyeitherthatSorgelaterexaggeratedhisown contribution,orthattheGRUfailedtopassonhismaterial. HesoughttostrengthenhiscoverbypubliclytauntingSovietdiplomatswhenhemetthemat internationalreceptions,butthestressofhisfantastichigh-wireactincreasinglytoldonhim,andwas reflectedinmassiveinfusionsofalcohol.InthecompanyofHanako,hesuccumbedtomorose,drinkfuelledmonologues,especiallywhenshebeggedhimtogiveherachild:‘Iamanoldman.Iam goingtodiesoon.Icandowithoutababy!Oh,poorSorge.Youshouldstudysothatyoucanget alongwithoutSorge…’Onenighthecrashedhismotorbike,withagonisingconsequences–many daysinhospitalandthelossofhisteeth.Fortherestofhislifehecouldswallowmeatonlyifitwas minced. Hehadsenseenoughtoabandonbiking,andinsteadacquiredasmallcar.Heembarkedona whimsicalculturalimprovementprogrammeforHanako,persuadinghertoreadGoneWiththe Wind,whichhehimselfconsidered‘magnificent’.Severalhundredpageslatershesaid,‘Ilike CaptainButler.’Perhapsprovidingaglimpseofhisself-image,Sorgedemanded,‘DoyouthinkIam likeRhettButler?’ButClausenwrotelaterabouthim:‘Heisatruecommunist…Heisamanwho candestroyevenhisbestfriendforthesakeofCommunism.’Hecouldalsodestroyacomrade.The spy’streatmentofhiswireless-operatorwascavalier,evenbrutal.Andhislifestylewasevermoreat oddswiththeidealofadedicatedservantoftheParty.Sorgehadmadehimselfprobablythebestinformedsecretagentintheworld.Nonetheless,hisrashnessmadeanultimatetrainwreckinevitable, evenifin1939thisstilllayasurprisingdistanceinthefuture. Bythecomingofwar,theSovietUnion’shugeexpenditureonespionage,anditsaccesstohighly placedcommunistsympathisersinmanylands,shouldhavemadetheKremlinthebest-informed centreofgovernmentontheplanet.YetthoseinMoscowwhoreceivedandprocessedthereports fromthefieldwerefartoofearfulofoffendingtheonlyaudiencethatmattered–JosephStalin, masteroftheKremlin–toforwardanyintelligencethatwaslikelytoproveunwelcome.Evenwhen importantinformationreachedMoscow,itwasseldomproperlyreviewed,farlessexploitedby policy-makers.ChristopherAndrewhaswritten:‘TheSovietcapacitytounderstandthepoliticaland diplomaticintelligenceitcollected…neverapproacheditsabilitytocollecttheintelligenceinthe firstplace.’Stalinactedashisownanalyst,preferringtodrillendlesswellsofespionageinsearchof imaginedconspiraciesratherthantouseintelligencetoinformpolicy-making.Sovietintelligence officersfearedfortheirlives,withgoodreason,iftheytoldStalinwhathedidnotwanttohear.He seemedtocreditonlyreportsthatidentifiedplotsagainsthimselforthestate,athomeandabroad. Wherethesedidnotexist,Russia’smostseniorintelligenceofficersinventedthem.Stalinusedthe productofhiscodebreakerstosomeeffectwhereandwhenthiswasavailable,butenteredthegreatest conflictinhistoryalmostblindthroughhisownactsofwill. AfterMunich,withthedoomofCzechoslovakiasealed,theCzechintelligencechiefFrantišek Moravecwasapproachedbythreerivalbiddersforhisservices:AdmiralWilhelmCanarisforthe Germans,ColonelLouisRivetfortheFrench,andMI6’slocalman,MajorHaroldGibson,forthe British.MistrustingtheFrench,MoravecdeterminedtothrowinhislotwithBritain.Inanticipationof theNazioccupationhedidhisutmosttoreinforcelinkswithlocalinformantsbeforehimselfleaving hiscountry.HewasabletotransfertoLondonlargesumsofforeigncurrency,andhopedthusto ensurethathecouldsustainaCzechintelligenceserviceinexile,thoughfewofhisagentswereever heardfromagain.On3March1939theAbwehr ’sPaulThummel,Moravec’sbestGermansource, methiminPragueandreportedthatthecitywouldbeoccupiedonthe15th.‘AgentA-54’alsowarned thathisentirestaffwouldbeseizedbytheGestapo,andcouldexpectnomercy.Moravecwasamazed thatThummeldeclaredhimselfwillingtocontinuehisowncollaboration.Theonlyproviso,saidthe Abwehrman,wasthattheCzechsmustensurethateverythingabouthimselfintheirfileswas destroyed.Withthatassurance,thetwomenparted.Thummelsaid,‘Goodluck,Colonel.Thisisnot goodbyebutAufwiedersehen.’TheGermanofficertookawaywithhimtwoaddressesforfuture correspondence,oneinHolland,theotherinSwitzerland. InPragueonthenightof13March,HaroldGibsonofMI6–‘Gibby’,asMoravecalwayscalled him,asmall,slightfigurewithamoustacheinproportion–droveacarintotheCzechIntelligence Department’sgarage.Thiswasloadedwithhundredsoffilespackedincanvasbags,whichwere borneawaytotheBritishembassy.Thefollowingafternoon,aDutchcivilianplanecharteredby BroadwaylandedatRuzynairfieldoutsidePraguetocollectpassengersforEngland–Moravecand tenofficersofhisstaff.Hechosethemunsentimentally,hewrotelater,takingthosewhowouldbe mostvaluableinLondon,andthosewhoknewtoomuchtobelefttotheGestapo.Hefeltobligedto leavebehindhisownwifeandtwodaughters,andindeedtoconcealfromthemhisintended destination:hesaidhewasmerelymakinganovernighttriptoMoravia. Theplanetookoffwithdifficultyamidstasnowstorm,whichforatimethreatenedtoforcethem downintothepathoftheapproachingGermans.Moraveccarriedabriefcasecontaining200,000 Reichsmarksand100,000Dutchguildersincash–about£32,000–toprovidehislittleteamwith furtherseedmoneyforfutureoperations.Astheplanepassedoverthemountainswherelay Czechoslovakia’sfrontier,thecolonelburiedhisheadinhishandsandsobbedunashamedlyatthe prospectofexile.AfterabriefstopinAmsterdam,thepartylandedsafelyatCroydon.Whenformer CzechprimeministerEdvardBenešlaterarrivedinLondon,MoravecreportedtohisPutney residencetoofferhisservicesandthoseofhisofficers,whichwerereadilyaccepted–hisrolewas formalisedthefollowingyear,whenBenešformedagovernmentinexile.Thecolonel’swifeand childrenescapedfromPragueandwalkedtosafetyinPoland,fromwhencetheyjoinedhimin Britain. InJune1939Moravecwasdelightedtoreceivealetter,forwardedfromaZürichcoveraddress, whichbegan,‘DearUncle,IthinkIaminlove.Ihavemetagirl.’Onthesamepagewasasecretink message,appointingarendezvousinTheHague.ItwasfromagentA-54,theAbwehrcolonelPaul Thummel.TheCzechofficerwhodulymethimearlyinAugustwarnedThummelthatMoravec’s shrunkenorganisationnolongerhadcashtolavishuponhimasgenerouslyasinthepast,butthe Germanrespondeddismissivelythat‘moreimportantmattersthanmoneyareatstake’.Hetoldthe CzechthataninvasionofPolandwasplannedfor1September,andprovideddetailsofthelatest Wehrmachtorderofbattle.HealsohandedoveralistofPolishtraitorsworkingfortheGermans. ThummelsubsequentlyprovidedtheNazis’amendedtimetable,includingon27Augustafinaldate forthePolishinvasionof3September1939.ForthepeopleofCzechoslovakia,Poland,andnowof allWesternEurope,thesparringwasover:thedeathstrugglehadbegun. *BoththeGRU’sandNKVD’sofficersandagentsreferredtotheirrespectiveheadquartersas‘Centre’. *Hamburger,likemanyothersinthisbook,usedavarietyofnamesinthecourseofhercareer,startingoutasKuczynskiandendingup asWerner.Toavoidconfusion,onlyonenameisusedthroughoutforallthosedescribed. 2 TheStormBreaks 1 TH E ‘ F I C TI O N F LO O D ’ ThefirstsignificantexcitementoftheBritishsecretservice’swarcameinNovember1939.A documentlaterknownasthe‘OsloReport’wassentanonymouslytotheBritishlegationinNorway, thenforwardedtoLondonbyitsnavalattaché.TheparcelthatreachedBroadwaycontainedseveral pagesofGermantypescriptandasmallcardboardbox.Itrepresentedtheoutcomeofanearlier ‘feeler ’messagetothelegation,sayingthatiftheBritishwantedtoreceivedetailsofnewscientific developmentsinGermany,theyshouldmakeaminorchangeinthewordingofaBBCbroadcastto Germany:insteadofstarting,‘Hello,thisisLondoncalling’,itwastosay,‘Hello,hello,thisis…’ Thiswasdulydone,andafterashortdelaythe‘OsloReport’wassubmitted. Itsnarrativecoveredaremarkablerangeofenemyactivities.Theanonymousauthorassertedthat theGermansweredevelopingacousticandradio-controlledtorpedoes;detailedthewavelengthson whichGermanradarstationswereoperating;suggestedbombingtheLuftwafferesearchstationat Rechlin;andmuchelse.Theboxcontainedatriggertube,tobeemployedfornewanti-aircraftshell proximityfuses.Butthecredibilityofthewholedocumentwasunderminedbytheinclusionoftwo nonsenses:aclaimthattheLuftwaffe’sJu-88bomberswerebeingproducedattheimpossiblerateof 5,000amonth;andthataGermanaircraft-carrier,theFranken,wasapproachingcompletionatKiel. ThesemistakescontributedtoaverdictbyWhitehallthatthedocumentshouldbedismissedasa Germanplant. ButthereportwasalsoreadbyDrReginaldJones,theoutspoken,combative,twenty-eight-yearoldassistantdirectorofAirMinistryscientificintelligence.Jonesshinesforthasanauthenticstarin thewartimesecretfirmament.Hewasasocialhybrid,sonofasergeantintheGrenadierGuardswho displayedprecociousbrillianceathissouthLondonschool,andlaterprovedasmuchateaseholding forthatgrandcountry-housepartiesasfightinghiscornerinmeetingschairedbytheprimeminister. HavinghadanotableearlycareerinphysicsandastronomyatOxford,whereforatimeheworked underFrederickLindemann–laterLordCherwell–hebecamefascinatedbythepossibilitiesof exploitinginfra-redtechnologyforthedetectionofaircraft,andin1936wenttoworkfortheAir Ministry.Hewasintolerantofslow-mindednessorbureaucracywhereverheencounteredit,andthere wasplentyofbothatBroadwayBuildings,whereafterabriefstintatBletchleyParkhewasinvitedto shareanofficewithFredWinterbotham. InthecourseofthewarRegJonesbecameoneoftheforemostBritishinvestigatorsofGermanair technology.InNovember1939,however,hisachievementsstilllayinthefuture,andhewasseenin Whitehallsimplyasapushyyoung‘boffin’whoseemedtoofreewithhisopinionsinthepresenceof seniorofficers.Jones,almostalone,electedtobelievethattheOslodocumentwasauthentic.His instinctbecameanear-certaintyinthesummerof1940,whentheLuftwaffebegantousetheWotan navigationalbeamtoguideitsbombersoverBritain,exploitingprinciplesmentionedbyOslo’s author.R.V.Jones,asheisknowntoposterity,foundtheinformationinvaluableindevisingcountermeasuresduringthe‘BattleoftheBeams’thatinfluencedtheBlitz–whichgainedhimtheearandthe admirationofWinstonChurchill.Againandagainthroughtheyearsthatfollowed,whentheBritish gainedhintsaboutnewGermanweapons–theacoustictorpedo,forexample–Joneswasableto pointouttoservicechiefsthatOslohadwarnedofthem.Afterthewar,inaretrospectiveonhisown intelligencecareer,thescientistusedtheexampleofthe1939documenttourgethat‘casualsources shouldnotbetreatedflippantly.Itwasprobablythebestsingle[scientificintelligence]reportreceived fromanysourceduringthewar.’ OnlyafteranintervalofalmostfortyyearsdidJonesestablishthedocument’sauthorship.Itwas theworkofaforty-five-year-oldGermanphysicistnamedHansFerdinandMayer,whoadopteda scientificcareerafterbeingbadlywoundedonhisfirstdayinactionasaconscriptin1914.Hehad beenemployedbySiemenssince1922,doingworkthatresultedintheawardofeighty-twopatents andthepublicationofforty-sevenpapers,andalsospentfouryearsasprofessorofsignalstechnique atAmerica’sCornellUniversity.Duringtheinter-waryearsheformedawarmfriendshipwithan EnglishmanworkingforGECnamedCobdenTurner,whobecamegodfathertoMayer ’ssecondson. TheGermanwasespeciallyimpressedbyagooddeed:whenhetoldTurneraboutthetragiccaseofa JewishschoolchilddisownedbyherNazifather,theEnglishmanarrangedforthelittlegirltocome toEngland,whereforeightyearsshelivedasamemberofhisownfamily. Whentheinternationalhorizondarkened,onwhatprovedTurner ’sfinalvisittoGermanyMayer toldhimthatifwarcame,hewouldtrytosupplyBritainwithinformationaboutGermanscientific andtechnologicalprogress.Inlate1939thescientistexploitedachancebusinesstriptoNorwayto makegoodonhispromise.HeborrowedanoldtypewriterfromtheporterattheHotelBristoland composedthe‘OsloReport’,whichwasdispatchedintwopartstotheBritishembassyon1and2 November.MayeralsowrotedirectlytoCobdenTurner,suggestingfurthercontactthroughan intermediaryinneutralDenmark.ButalthoughthislettercausedtwoBritishsecurityofficerstovisit andquestiontheGECman,forreasonsunknownnothingwasdonetoopencommunicationwith Mayer–MI6’sofficialhistorymakesnomentionofthiscourageousGerman.InAugust1943Mayer wasarrestedbytheGestapoinhisofficeatSiemens,andchargedwithlisteningtotheBBC.Hewas confinedinDachau,butwasfortunateenoughtobeemployedinatechnicalplant,wherehesurvived thewar.HisbravegesturewaspromptedbyadmirationforCobdenTurner,whomhelikedtoregard asarepresentativeEnglishman.RecognitionofMayer ’scontribution,however,cameonlyfromReg Jones. Amongthereasonsthe‘OsloReport’receivedsuchachillyreceptionisthatitwasdebatedin WhitehalljustastheBritishsecretcommunityreeledinthewakeofasuccessfulGermanruse.On9 November1939,duringthefirst,passivephaseofthewarthatbecamederisivelyknownasthe ‘sitzkrieg’,thetwoseniorMI6officersintheneutralNetherlands,CaptainSigismundPayneBestand MajorRichardStevens,drovewithaDutchofficerinBest’sLincolnZephyrcartoarendezvousatthe CaféBackus,situatedbetweentheDutchandGermanbordercustomsbarriersatVenlo.Within minutesoftheirarrival,theywereseizedbyarmedmen.WhentheDutchmandrewapistolandfired atoneassailant,hewashimselfshotdead.Best,Stevensandtheirlocaldriverwerethenhustled150 yardstothefrontier:theirkidnapperswereNazicounter-intelligenceofficersoftheSD,ledbythe branch’slaterboss,WalterSchellenberg,whowasnarrowlymissedbytheDutchofficer ’sbullet.The Britishspieswerefortunateenoughtokeeptheirlives,butspentmostoftherestofthewarin Sachsenhausenconcentrationcamp.Incontradictionofmythsaboutheroicsilenceunder interrogation,StevensandBesttoldtheirabductorswhattheyknewaboutMI6,whichwasplenty:its ContinentaloperationswerechieflyconductedfromtheirownHaguestation. ‘TheVenloincident’,asitbecameknowninWhitehall,derivedfromanapproachsomeweeks earlierbysupposedlyanti-NaziGermangeneralseagertonegotiatewithBritain.MI6becamemuch excitedbytheprospectofbrokeringadeal,thoughtheForeignOfficewasprudentlysceptical.Sir AlexanderCadoganwroteinhisdiaryon23October:‘Ithinkthey[theGerman“plotters”]areHitler agents.’Thewarcabinetwasinformedaweeklater,andWinstonChurchill,thenstillFirstLordofthe Admiralty,expressedviolentobjectionstoanyparley.ButthegovernmentauthorisedMI6tocontinue discussions,provided–asCadoganstrictlyinstructed–nothingwasputinwritingtothesupposed dissidents.TheBritishignoredthedangerthattheirinterlocutorswouldplaynotmerelyadiplomatic gamewiththem,butarougherone.Theyshouldhavebeenalerttosuchanoutcome,becausethe Nazishadpreviousformascross-borderkidnappers:inApril1934theyhadluredtotheGerman frontieraCzechintelligenceofficer,twenty-nine-year-oldCaptainJanKirinovic,thenrushedhim across.AGestapowitnessgaveevidenceatKirinovic’ssubsequenttrialthathehadbeenarrestedon Germansoil,andKirinovicwassentencedtotwenty-fiveyears’hardlabour.Althoughinthe followingMarchtheCzechofficerwasexchangedfortwoGermanspies,hediedinsaneafewyears laterasaresultofthedrugsadministeredtohimbytheGestapo,notablyscopolamine. InNovember1939,itwassymptomaticofMI6’sinstitutionalweaknessthatitsHaguestation employedFolkertvanKoutrik,anAbwehrinformant.Thesupposedrepresentativeofthedisaffected Germangenerals,‘MajorSchaemmel’,wasintruththeRSHA’sSchellenberg,whomtheBritish officersobliginglysuppliedwithawirelesstransmitter.EitherHitlerorHimmlerpersonally authorisedthekidnapping,whichtheBritishatfirstsoughttokeepsecret.Whenanofficialasked Cadoganwhatwastobesaidabout‘thebrawlinHolland’,thesubjectoffeveredrumourand speculation,thepermanentunder-secretaryorderedtheissueofa‘D’Notice,forbiddingmentionofit intheBritishpress.Amazingly,forafortnightafterVenlotheGerman‘conspirators’sustaineda dialoguewithMI6,untilon22NovemberHimmlerlostinterestandtheGermansshutdownthe exchangeaftersendingalastderisivemessagetoBroadway.TheNazisthenpubliclyannouncedthat BestandStevenshadbeenengagedinanassassinationplotagainstHitler.MeanwhilevanKoutrik’s betrayalwentsofarundetectedthathesecuredemploymentwithMI5inLondon,anditwasvery fortunatethathebrokeoffcontactwiththeAbwehr–perhapsforlackofmeansofcommunication– becauseitwaswithinhislaterknowledgetohavebetrayedelementsoftheDoubleCrosssystemto them. InsideWhitehall,MI6soughttotalkdownVenlo,arguingthattheGermanshadbehavedcrasslyby grabbingthetwoofficersinsteadofsustainingadouble-crossgamewiththem.Itishardtooverstate theepisode’ssignificance,however,forthefuturecourseofthesecretwar.Britishespionage activitiesontheContinent,suchastheywere,sufferedadevastatingblow:theGermanswereableto relieveBestofalistofhisstation’scontacts,whichhehadtakeninhispockettotherendezvous.The reputationofthesecretservicewithintheBritishgovernment,nothighbeforethedébâcle,afterwards saggedlowindeed.GuyLiddellofMI5speculatedinhisdiarythatBest,apreposterousfigurewho affectedamonocle,mighthavebeenadoubleagent–‘therealniggerinthewoodpile.[He]had apparentlybeeninfairlylowwateranditwasnoticeablethatafterhebecameassociatedwith[Dr Franz]Fischer[aNazidoubleagentinHolland]heseemedtobeverywellinfunds.’Thereisno reasontothinkLiddell’ssuspicionsjustified.Merebunglingwasresponsibleforthefiasco,though WalterSchellenbergassertedlaterthatBestwaswillingtobe‘turned’.Meanwhile,theDutchwere embarrassedbytherevelationthatoneoftheirownintelligenceofficershadbeencomplicitina Britishplot,whichstrengthenedtheNazis’propagandahandbycompromisingHolland’sproclaimed neutrality. AfurtherconsequenceofVenlowasthattheBritishbecamemorbidlysuspiciousofanyapproach– andtherewereseveral,laterinthewar–byGermansprofessingtorepresentan‘anti-Hitler Resistance’.Inonesensetheircautionwasprudent,becausemostofthearistocratsandarmyofficers whobecameengagedinplotsagainsttheNazischerishedabsurdfantasiesabouttheGermanythey mightpreservethroughanegotiationwiththeWesternAllies.FormerLeipzigmayorKarlGördeler, forinstance,wasanationalistwithviewsonGermanterritorialrightsinEuropethatwerenotfar shortofHitler ’s.EvenhadtheFührerperished,therewouldhavebeennothingplausiblefor Germany’senemiestodiscusswithhisdomesticfoes.Attheveryleast,however,Britishparanoia aboutsufferingarepeatoftheVenlohumiliationpermanentlyexcludedMI6fromsomeuseful sources,whichtheRussiansandlatertheAmericanswerelefttoexploit.Moreover,fortherestofthe warBroadway’schiefsmaintainedanexaggeratedrespectfortheirGermanadversaries,derived fromthememoryofhavingbeenfooledbytheminNovember1939. Throughtheicywintermonthsofthe‘PhoneyWar ’,theGC&CSatBletchleystruggledwiththe intractableEnigmaproblem,whileBroadway’sspiesproducedlittleornousefulinformationabout theenemyandhisintentions.KennethStrongofWarOfficeIntelligencewrote:‘Wehadacontinuous streamofcallersfromtheServiceswithanextraordinaryvarietyofqueriesandrequests.Whatwere themostprofitabletargetsforairattacksinthisorthatarea,andwhateffectwouldtheseattackshave ontheGermanArmy?Wasourinformationaboutthesetargetsadequateandaccurate?Howwasthe GermanArmyreactingtoourpropagandacampaigns?Ifoundsomequitefantasticoptimism regardingtheeffectsfrompropaganda.Thedroppingofleafletswasconsideredalmostamajor militaryvictory.’ SomeMI6officerswenttoelaboratelengthstoconcealtheirlackofagentnetworks.RegJones citedtheexampleofWilfred‘Biffy’Dunderdale,whowasresponsibleforFrance,andfedtoJones’s branchasuccessionoftastytitbitsontheGermanJu-88bomber,allegedlycollectedbyspies.First therewasinformationaboutitsengines;thenitselectrics;andsomewhatlateritsarmament.Jones teasedDunderdalethathemusthavesecuredacopyoftheaircraft’soperatinghandbook,thenfed extractstoBroadway,tocreateanimpressionofmultiplesources.Thehaplessofficeradmittedthat Joneswasright,butbeggedhimtokeephismouthshut.Hecouldkeephisbossesmuchmore interested,hesaid,bydrip-feedingthedata.ThiswasnottheonlyoccasionwhenDunderdale–like officersofallintelligenceservices–soughtto‘sexup’themeansbywhichhismaterialhadbeen acquired.HealsoproduceddetailsofGermantroopmovementssupposedlysecuredbyagent networks,whichinrealityderivedfromFrenchintercepts. Muchcouldbelearnedfromanenemy’swirelesstransmissions,evenwithoutbreakinghiscodes, through‘trafficanalysis’–thestudyofsignalorigins,volumeandcallsignstopinpointunits,ships, squadrons.Usefulinformationwasalsogleanedbythe‘YService’,eavesdroppingonvoice transmissions,andbybreakingsimpleenemycodesusedforpassinglow-grademessages.The Frenchforwardcryptographicalunitwasbasedat‘StationBruno’,intheChâteaudeVignobles locatedatGretz-Armainvilliers,fifteenmileseastofParis.Brunoreceivedanimportant reinforcementfollowingthefallofPoland.GuyLiddellofMI5recordedon10October1939that seventeenPolishcryptanalystswereseekingasyluminBritain.BletchleyParkshruggeddismissively thatithadnouseforthem,eventhoughitschiefAlastairDennistonhadmetsomeofthesamemenin Warsawafewmonthsearlier,andknewthattheirclaimstohavepenetratedRussianandGerman ciphers‘cantosomeextentbemaintained’. DennistonsuggestedthattheywouldbemoreusefulattheChâteaudeVignobles,workingwith GustaveBertrand,whichwaswheretheyweresent–thoughBletchleylaterchangeditsmindandtried invaintogetthemback.ItwasatBruno,on17January1940,thattheex-Warsawgroupbrokeitsfirst wartimeEnigmasignal.By11MarchCol.LouisRivet,headoftheFrenchsecretservice,waswriting inhisdiary:‘ThedecryptsoftheEnigmamachinearebecominginterestingandnumerous.’During themonthsthatfollowed,however,materialwasreadfartooslowly–outof‘realtime’–toinfluence eventsonthebattlefield.Instead,Alliedintelligenceofficersstrovetomakesenseofajumbleof humintwarnings,ofvaryingdegreesofplausibility,aboutwhenHitlerintendedtostrikeintheWest. ThefirstofthesehadcomeinthepreviousNovemberwhenMajorGijsbertSas,Dutchmilitary attachéinBerlin,receivedadramatictip-offfromhisfriendColonelHansOsteroftheAbwehr:the Wehrmacht,saidOster,wouldlaunchafull-scaleoffensiveagainsttheBritishandFrencharmieson the12thofthatmonth.Thiscoincidedwithseveralotheridenticalorsimilarwarnings–includingan importantonefromCol.Moravec’sCzechsinLondon,relayedbytheirmaninSwitzerlandfrom AgentA-54,theAbwehr ’sPaulThummel.Whennothinghappenedon12November,theBritishand FrenchchiefsofstaffassumedthattheywerethevictimsofNazidisinformation.TheDutchalready suspectedSasofbeingadoubleagent,andthecredibilityoftheothersources,includingA-54, sufferedaccordingly.Yetthewarningswerecorrect.Hitlerhadindeedintendedtostrikein November.Hewasenragedthathisgeneralsinsisteduponalast-minutepostponementuntilspring, becausethearmywasunreadytomove.Herewasavividillustrationofapreceptlateradvancedbya BritishArmyintelligenceofficer:‘Perfectintelligenceinwarmustofnecessitybeout-of-dateand thereforeceasestobeperfect…Wedealnotwiththetrue,butwiththelikely.’ ThenextexcitementtookplaceonedayinJanuary1940:thickfogcausedaGermancourier aircraftflownbyMajorErichHönmannstoforced-landinneutralBelgium.Localpolicearrestedthe pilotandhispassenger,anofficernamedReinberger,interruptingthemastheyattemptedtoburn paperstheycarried,andretrievedthecharredsheetsfromastove.Withinforty-eighthourstheFrench andBritishhighcommandswerereadingtheWehrmacht’splanforitsintendedinvasionofFrance andtheLowCountries,focusedonathrustthroughHollandandBelgium.Herewasatextbook exampleofagenuineintelligencecoup,withwhollyunhelpfulconsequences.TheFrenchwere confirmedintheirconvictionthattheGermanswouldattackthroughBelgiumastheyhaddonein 1914,andasallFrance’sdeploymentsanticipated.TheBritishsuspectedanenemydeception:the materialseemedtoogoodtobetrue.GuyLiddellofMI5wrotewearilyon14January:‘AGerman aeroplanecamedowninBelgium…withcertainpapersfoundonthepilotindicatingprojectedattack bytheGermansonBelgiumandHolland.Itlooksratherasifthismayhavebeenpartofthescheme forthewarofnerves.’CadoganattheForeignOfficedescribedreceiving‘completeplanofGerman invasionoftheLowCountries.Veryodd.Butonecan’tignorethesethings,andallprecautionstaken.’ KennethStrongwroteruefullyafterwards:‘SooftenIhavehearditsaidthatifweonlyhadthe plansoftheothersidethingswouldbesimple:whentheyactuallycameourwaywefoundgreat difficultyinpersuadingourselvesthattheyweregenuine.’Mostimportant,however,thecapture immediatelyforfeitedallvirtue,becausetheGermanproprietorsoftheplanknewthattheAllieshad it.Thus,Hitlerinsistedonchangingtheinvasionconcept,tothrustinsteadthroughtheArdennes, whichprovedtheoneauthenticstrategicinspirationofhislife.Herewasanothercriticallessonabout intelligence,especiallyimportantforcodebreakers:capturedmaterialbecameworthlessifits originatorsdiscoveredthatitwasinenemyhands. AlexanderCadogannotedinhisdiaryfor19January1940thatStewartMenziesnowseemedto expecttheGermanstoattacksoonafter25January,andaddeddismissively,‘buthe’srather mercurial,andratherhastyandsuperficial(likemyself!)’.Ifthisremarksomewhatshort-changedthe diarist,itwasscarcelyaringingendorsementof‘C’.Therewasonefurtherstrand:low-grade AbwehrmessagesdecryptedbyMI5’sRadioIntelligenceServiceofferedindicationsaboutthe loomingonslaught.Atthattime,however,machinerywaslackingtoanalysesuchmaterial,tofeedit intothemilitarycommandsystemandensurethatnoticewastakenbycommanders.Inthatpre-Ultra universe,politicians,diplomatsandgeneralswerechronicallyscepticalaboutintelligenceofall kinds.WhenanewwarningreachedMI6viaMoravec’s‘LondonCzechs’–thatAbwehrofficerPaul ThummelexpectedagreatWehrmachtthruston10May,itvanishedinthewelterof‘noise’that spring. The9AprilGermaninvasionofNorwaycaughttheWesternAlliestotallybysurprise.Thoughno decryptswereavailable,theAdmiraltyignoredormisreadplentifulcluesaboutHitler ’sintentions. WhentheWehrmacht’samphibiousforcesbegantolandontheNorwegiancoast,theRoyalNavy’s majorunitswerefaraway,awaitingananticipatedbreakoutintotheAtlanticbyGermanbattleships. Throughtheweeksthatfollowed,WehrmachteavesdropperseasilytrackedtheBritishbrigades strugglingtoaidthelittleNorwegianarmy,whileintelligencelearnedlittleornothingaboutthe invaders’lightningmovements. On10May1940,HitlerlaunchedhisBlitzkriegintheWest.Thepanzerssweptthroughthe Ardennes,acrosstheMeuse,andthencetotheChannelcoastandintotheheartofFrance.Muchofthe informationsentbackfromthefrontbyFrenchunitswassofancifulthataheadquartersintelligence officer,AndréBeaufre,dismisseditcontemptuouslyasa‘fictionflood’.Gen.MauriceGamelin,the Alliedcommander-in-chief,rejectedeveryreportthatcontradictedhisobsessivebeliefthatthe GermansstillplannedtomaketheirmainattackthroughBelgium. ThecampaignprovedatriumphfortheGermanarmy’sintelligencedepartment,aswellasforits generals.Ananglophileandbonviveur,Lt.Col.UlrichLiss,headedForeignArmiesWest–FHW,the Wehrmacht’sprincipalintelligenceevaluationdepartment.Liss,whowasexceptionallyableand energetic,calledsigint‘thedarlingofallintelligencechiefs’,becauseitcouldbetrustedasspies couldnot–andinMay1940thebestofitwasinthehandsofhisownstaff.Duringthelong,static winter,GermaninterceptorshadidentifiedthelocationsofmostoftheAllies’formations,much assistedbytheinsecurityoftheFrencharmy’swireless-operatorsandheadquartersstaffs,whooften discussedplansanddeploymentsinplainlanguage.Col.Handeeming,radiointelligence’s interceptionchiefwithArmyGroupA,wasexplicitlycommissionedtomonitortheFrenchSeventh Army’sadvanceintoBelgium,whichhedidwithnotableefficiency. Liss’smenalsobenefitedfromsecuringvastnumbersofAlliedprisoners.Allarmiesgleaned muchfromPoWinterrogation.Throughoutthewar,eveniffewprisonersknowinglybetrayed secrets,amidtheshockofcapturemostgavetheircaptorsmorethantheregulation‘name,rankand number ’.Rommel’sintelligencestafffoundthatBritishprisonerstalkedfreelyuntilalatestageofthe NorthAfricancampaign.OneofMontgomery’sofficersenthusedtotheGermans,withalmostinsane indiscretion,thatEighthArmy’sradiomonitoringservicewas‘brilliantineveryrespect’.AGerman wrotethatBritishofficerswererepeatedlycaptured‘carryingimportantlists,codesandmaps’.Itwas astandardtechniqueforintelligenceofficerstoengagePoWsinapparentlyinnocentconversation aboutnon-militarysubjects.TheWehrmacht’s‘GuidelinesfortheinterrogationofEnglishprisoners ofwar ’,datedBerlin,16April1940,urgedcommanderswheneverpossibletouseinterrogators familiarwithBritainandtheBritish.‘Ifcordiallyaddressed,’saidthebriefingnote,‘every Englishmanwillatonceanswerallquestionsentirelyfrankly.’Beyondimmediatetacticalissues,the IntelligenceDepartmentadvised: SpecialvalueissetonprobingprevailingeconomicandsocialcircumstancesinEngland.Answerstothefollowingquestionsare useful: a)WhatareyoutoldaboutHitler? b)WhatareyoutoldabouttheNazis? c)WhatareyoutoldabouttheGestapo? d)WhatareyoutoldabouttheJews? e)WhatareyoutoldaboutfoodconditionsinGermany? f)Whatareyoutoldaboutmilitarysuccesses? g)Howdoyoumakepropaganda? h)Howarewomenandchildrencaredfor? i)Doyoutakecareofelderlyparentsnolongerabletowork,whosesonsaresoldiers?… k)Whatisthefoodsituation–especiallymeat,vegetables,eggs,butter,andbread? l)Whatdoyouthinkoftheblack-out? m)WhoiscurrentlythemostpopularmaninEngland? n)WhodoyouconsiderthemostforcefulpersonalityintheBritishcabinet? o)DoyoulistentoGermanradio? p)Doyoulike[Lord]Haw-Haw[theNazipropagandabroadcasterWilliamJoyce]? q)HowareyourrelationswiththeFrench? r)DoyoubelievethatGermanyisbentonworldconquest? s)Wouldyoumakepeacetomorrow? ThebehaviourofmostPoWswasstronglyinfluencedbytheirownnation’simmediate circumstances.Atthistime,whenAlliedfortuneswereplumbingthedepths,areportonthehandfulof GermanPoWsinBritishhandsrecordedgloomily:‘Theofficers(andmostofthemen)werequite immunetopropaganda,thinkHitlerisagodandrefusetobelieveasinglewordoftheBritishnews.’ Bycontrast,aSouthAfricanRAFpilotnamedSgtEdwardWunschprovidedhisGermancaptorswith ahighlysympatheticviewoftheNazicause,asrecordedbyhisinterrogator:‘LikeallSouthAfricans whohaveenteredDulagLuft,Wunschisanunashamedanti-Semite…[Hesays]Thereisnohatred towardsGermanyinSouthAfrica,noenthusiasmforthewaratall.Mostpeoplebelievethenonsense pressandpropagandatellthemaboutGermanatrocitiesbut…W.thinksitpossiblethatoneday SouthAfricacouldagreetoaseparatepeace,ifGermanycontinuestobemilitarilysuccessful [author ’sitalics].’ TheAllieslostthe1940battleforFranceformanyreasons.Ithasbeenasourceoffiercecontroversy eversince,whethertheFrencharmy’sdefeatresultedfromafailureofjudgementbyMaurice Gamelin,Alliedcommander-in-chief,orinsteadfromanationalmoralcollapse.Itisunlikelythatany amountofintelligenceoradvancewarningcouldhavechanged1940outcomes.TheGermanarmy showeditselfanincomparablymoreeffectivefightingforcethantheAllies’,andtherewouldbeno victoriesuntilthatchanged.IfBritishandFrenchintelligencewaspoorin1940,sowaseverything else. AstheContinentwasevacuated,therewasalateflurryofbuccaneeringbysecretserviceofficers andfreelances:MI6’sMajorMontyChidson,aformerheadoftheHaguestation,rescuedapriceless haulofindustrialdiamondsfromAmsterdam.PeterWilkinsongotmostofthePolishgeneralstaff outofFrance.TommyDavies,apeacetimedirectoroftheCourtauldstextilebusiness,escapedfrom itsCalaisplantwithaloadofplatinumhoursbeforetheGermansarrived.Buttheselittlecoupswere fleabitesinthegreatschemeofaffairs.MI6hadmadenocontingencyplansforstay-behindagents,to reportfromFranceintheeventofitsoccupationbytheNazis,andBroadwaywouldprobablyhave beenaccusedofdefeatismhaditdoneso.Throughmanymonthsthatfollowed,Britain’sintelligence serviceswerethusalmostblindtoeventsontheContinent,tothefrustrationoftheprimeminister. Beleagueredontheirisland,theybecamedependentforknowledgeofHitler ’sdoingsonthevagaries ofairreconnaissance,andreportsfromneutraldiplomatsandcorrespondents. Thesecurityserviceexploredthelimitsofthepossibleandtheacceptableinhandlingastreamof AbwehragentswhodescendedonBritain,andwerepromptlycaptured.MI5spurnedtortureasa meansofinterrogation,butinSeptember1940atCamp020,theservice’sinterrogationcentreat LatchmereHousenearHamCommon,oneofitsofficersassaultedandbatteredthecapturedAbwehr agent‘Tate’–HarryWilliamson–untilhewasdraggedoffhim.GuyLiddelldeploredthisepisode, sayingthatheobjectedto‘Gestapomethods’onbothmoralandprofessionalgrounds.Col.Alexander ScotlandwaslikewisepreventedfrominjectingWilliamsonwithdrugs.NavalIntelligenceDivision interrogatorstesteddrugsoneachotherasameansofextractinginformation,andconcludedthatit wasawasteoftime.Skilledquestioning,theydecided,wasnotmerelymoreethical,butmore effective. Asthenextactofthegreatglobaldramaunfolded–Hitler ’sairassaultonBritain–neither BroadwaynorBletchleyParkhadmuchtocontribute.ThemostsignificantaidtoFighterCommand initsepicstruggletorepelGöring’sairfleetswaswirelesstrafficanalysisofthefloodofMorse fromtheGermans’newFrench,Belgian,DutchandNorwegianbases,togetherwithmonitoringof LuftwaffecockpitchatterbytheGermanlinguistsoftheRAF’sinfantYService,mostofthem women. Theprimeministerandthechiefsofstaffwereformanymonthspreoccupied,evenobsessed,by twoquestions:wouldtheGermansinvade;andifso,when?InthemadmoodprevailinginLondonin theautumnof1940,ablendofheroicdefianceandabsurdity,theWarOffice’sdirectorofmilitary intelligencesuggestedexploitingcapturedAbwehragentstotrytoprovoketheGermansinto hasteninganinvasion,whichhefeltsurecouldbedefeatedbytheRoyalNavyandtheBritishArmy. ThisproposalfoundnofavourinWhitehall.MeanwhilethedisasterinFrancehadendowedthe Wehrmachtwithalmostmagicalpowersinthemindsofthegenerals,manyofwhomconvinced themselvesthatHitlermightlaunchanamphibiousassaultonBritainwithonlyafewweeks’ preparation,offeringnonoticetothedefenders. TheRoyalNavy’sCommanderGeoffreyColpoyswasresponsiblefordeliveringtoDowning Streeteachdayat1p.m.areportfromtheSpecialInvasionWarningCommittee,whichformostof theautumntookitforgrantedthataGermanassaultwasimminent,andconcerneditselfchieflywith thetiming.TheJointIntelligenceCommittee,chairedbytheForeignOffice’sVictor‘Bill’CavendishBentinck,onlyoncesoundedthealarmtosuggestthatinvasionwasimminent,on7September,when, asBentinckhimselfnotedsardonicallylater,hehimselfwasbrieflyabsentandthearmy’ssomewhat unstabledirectorofintelligence–thesamemanwhoadvocatedincitingtheWehrmachttoland– temporarilyheldthechair.Churchillhimselfwasalwaysscepticalaboutaninvasion,buthedeemedit politicallyimperativetosustaintheBritishpeople’sbeliefinthethreatnotonlyin1940,but throughoutthefollowingyearalso,topromotetheirvigilanceandsenseofpurpose.On31JulySir AlexanderCadoganexpressedhisownconvictionthattheGermanswouldnotcome,butwould insteadthrustatGibraltarandEgypt,thenadded,‘our“intelligence”givesnothingtocorroboratethis theory.Butthenthey’reawfullybad.’NowhereintheworldwereBritishagentsproviding informationofmuchassistancetothewareffort.TheBritishC-in-CinSingapore,Air-MarshalSir RobertBrooke-Popham,wroteinfrustration:‘LittleornorelianceisplaceduponMI6information byanyauthoritieshereandlittlevaluableinformationappearstobeobtained.’Thesamewastrue nearerhome. FormanymonthsaftertheGermanoccupationofWesternEurope,theonlynationstillabletoexploit secretsourcesonalargescalewastheneutralSovietUnion,throughitsnetworksinBelgium, GermanyandSwitzerland.Inthosedaysitsagentsdidnotevenneedtotroublewithwireless:they simplypassedreportstotheirnearestSovietdiplomaticmission.InMay1940theGRU’sLeopold TreppermovedfromBrusselstoParis,takingwithhimhismistress,theexoticallynamedGeorgiede Winter,atwenty-year-oldAmerican,andleavinghisdeputyAnatoliGourevitchtoarrangethe Trepperfamily’sreturntoMoscow.Gourevitch’sownpersonalaffairswerescarcelyuncomplicated. Underhiscoverasa‘Uruguayanbusinessman’hehadasuccessionofgirlfriends,butfeltobligedto breakoffrelationswiththeprettiestwhensherevealedthatherfatherknewSouthAmericawell.‘In othercircumstances,’hewrotewistfully,‘Icouldprobablyhavelovedher,butsuchgoodfortuneis deniedtoasecretagent.’Thereafter,however,heformedafriendshipwithaneighbouringfamily namedBarcza,whoseelderlyHungarianhusbandwasmarriedtoMargaret,amuchyoungerBelgian blondewithaneight-year-oldson.Followingherhusband’ssuddendeath,Gourevitchbeganan intenseaffairwithher.MikhailMakarov,theotherGRUcareerofficerinBelgium,wasalsoleading whatGourevitchdescribedprimlyas‘anexcessivelydissipatedlife’,inwhichprostitutesplayeda conspicuousrole. TheGermaninvasionofBelgiumgaveGourevitchsomebadmoments:Brusselspolicearrested hissupposedEnglishfriendandlanguageteacher,whoturnedouttobeanAbwehragent;theman waspromptlyliberatedwhenhiscompatriotsoverranthecapital.TheGRUnetwork’scovercompany ‘AuRoi’collapsedwhenitsJewishfrontmenfledandthebusinesswassequestered.Moscowordered GourevitchtotakeovercontroloftheBelgianoperation.HeenteredMargaretBarczaonCentre’s books–allegedlywithoutherknowledge–asasourceunimaginativelycodenamed‘theBlonde’.The mostbelievableaspectofhisownlateraccountofthewholesagaisitsemphasisontherickety, racketynatureofaspyringthathistory–especiallySoviethistory–hasdignifiedasoneofthegreat secretoperationsofalltime.GourevitchassertedthatLeopoldTrepper ’smuch-vauntedintelligence networkinFranceandBelgium‘wascomposedalmostentirelyofhisoldPalestinianfriends’,and providedMoscowwithnousableintelligenceaboutGermany’sdescentsonPoland,Scandinaviaor WesternEurope.ItseemsunlikelythattheRussianslearnedmuchmorefromitsactivitiesduringthe yearthatfollowedthanChurchillandhisgeneralsgleanedfromtheirmorningpapers. IntheabsenceofseriousBritishmilitaryoperationssaveinNorthAfrica,secretwarbecamea massivegrowthactivity,impelledbytheprimeministerhimself.SpecialOperationsExecutivewas createdinJuly1940,to‘setEuropeablaze’,whilethearmedforcesspawnedcommandos, paratroopersandastringof‘privatearmies’,notablyintheMiddleEast.Newrecruitsofallkinds floodedintoBroadway,someofthemexotic.‘Writersofthrillers,’wrotethesupremelycynical MalcolmMuggeridge,‘tendtogravitatetothesecretserviceassurelyasthementallyunstable becomepsychiatrists,ortheimpotentpornographers.’ThuswasGrahamGreenedispatchedto Freetown,SierraLeone,Muggeridgehimself–aveteranforeigncorrespondent–toLourenço Marques,inPortugueseMozambique,andthejournalistKimPhilbywelcomedintoBroadway.It becameasourceofdismaytocareerintelligenceofficers,protectiveofMI6’sreputation,thatits wartimerecruitswholatercommandedmostpublicattentionwerealleithermavericksortraitors. LackingitsownagentsontheContinent,BroadwayturnedtotheEuropeanexilegovernmentsin Londonforassistanceinidentifyingsources.ThePolesbegantobuildimpressivenetworksintheir owncountry,thoughtheysufferedgrievouslyfromthefact–thenofcourseunknowntothem–that theGermansreadtheciphersinwhichtheycommunicatedwiththeiragents.FrantišekMoravecand hisCzechgroupachievedformalrecognitionastheintelligencearmoftheirgovernment;MI6 providedthemwithwirelessfacilitiesanddocuments.TheCzechsestablishedanewbaseinthreelittle adjoiningsuburbanhousesinRosendaleRoad,WestDulwich,untiltheseweredestroyedbythe Luftwaffe,thenlatein1940movedtoanewbuildinginBayswater.MI6didnot,however,givethem money.Moravec,afterspendingthelastofthecashhehadbroughtoutofPrague,wasobligedto negotiatealoanof£50,000,topayhisnetwork’soutgoingsof£3,000amonth.Forsometimehe continuedtoreceiveEastEuropeanmaterialviaZürich–CaptainKarelSedlacekhadservedas Moravec’sstationchieftheresince1934,undercoverasanewspapercorrespondent;sincehelacked anyliterarygiftshewasobligedtopayaghosttowritecopyinhisname.TheAbwehr ’sPaul ThummelusedtheCzechofficerashislinktoLondon;whenhewasarrestedbytheGestapoinMarch 1942,Moravec’slittlegroupranoutofsources. TheBritishenjoyedoneimmensepieceofgoodfortunefollowingtheirevictionfromthe Continent:nowheredidtheGermanscapturepeopleordocumentsthatbetrayedAlliedprogressin crackingEnigma.Between1940and1944manyFrenchmen,includinghundredsofthousandsof servantsoftheVichypuppetregime,collaboratedwiththeiroccupiers.ButVichy’smilitary intelligenceofficers,andseveralPolesattachedtothemwhowereprivytothepioneeringEnigma codebreakingoperation,revealednothingevenlaterinthewar,whentheywereexposedtoenemy interrogation.ThecapaciousnetscastacrossEuropebytheNazisfocusedoverwhelminglyon huntingdissenters,notmachines.Intheearlyyearsofoccupation,whenmostpeopleintheconquered societiesacquiescedintheirfate,Berlin’sspiesandpolicemenuncoveredlittletoruffletheirmasters’ complacency,andmercifullynothingthatcausedthemtodoubtthesecurityoftheirown communications. Inthewinterof1940–41,noneoftheprincipalbelligerentsknewmuchmoreabouteachother ’s affairsthantheylearnedfromstudyingtheinternationalpressandwatchingsuchmovementsasthey couldseeoftherivalarmies,naviesandairfleets.Mostofthesuccessfulcodebreakingthatwas takingplacewasbeingdonebytheGermans,andespeciallybytheKriegsmarine’sB-Dienst.The Britishlackedpowertoaccomplishanythingsavethefeedingoftheirownpeople.Hitlerpreparedto launchthemostdramaticandambitiouslungeofhiscareer,theassaultontheSovietUnion,anact thatcouldonlyhavebeenundertakenbyamaneitherbereftofaccurateintelligenceaboutthe economicstrengthofhisintendedvictim,orrecklesslyindifferenttoit. 2 S H A D O W I NG C A NA R I S TheGermanshadmadethemselvesmastersofEurope,andshowntheWehrmachttobethemost formidablefightingforceintheworld.Bycontrast,whateverthelimitationsoftheBritishandother Alliedintelligenceservices,thoseofHitler ’sAbwehrwereincomparablyworse.Inthesummerof 1940thechiefsoftheNazis’information-gatheringmachinetoyedwithaschemetoplantanagenton awreckedshipofftheEnglishsouthcoast,thoughtheynevercameupwithacrediblenotionofwhat suchahaplesscastawaymightachievethere.TheyalsodiscussedlandingagentsinKent,whowould beinvitedtoscalethewhitecliffs,aplanthatwasfrustratedbyashortageofspieswith mountaineeringskills.MeanwhiletheLuftwaffe’sintelligencedepartmentmisjudgedeveryaspectof theBattleofBritain,fromrespectiveaircraftstrengthsandlossestotargetselection.InSeptember 1940,followingtheinterrogationsofthefirstenemyspieslandedinBritain,KennethStrongofWar Officeintelligenceprofessedhimselfbaffled.HecouldnotreconcilehislifelongrespectforGerman efficiencywiththerisiblemanagementoftheNazis’espionageactivities. TheAbwehrbungledtheselection,training,briefingandequipmentofagentsforserviceabroad; seldomweretheyevenprovidedwithdecentforgedpassports.Itishardtodistinguishbetweenreality andfantasyinthedoingsofitsoperationalsection,AbwehrII,becauseitswardiarywascompiledto impresshigherauthority,andthusincludedreportsfromagentswhoneverexisted,aboutoperations thatnevertookplace.Itschief,AdmiralWilhelmCanaris,whowasregardedfordecadesafterthewar asanimportantpersonalityandevenasaherooftheResistancetoHitler,wasinrealityatemporiser wholackedboththemoralcouragetochallengetheNaziswhomhedespised,andtheskillstorunan effectivesecretserviceintheirinterests. ThefirstmantograspthiswasnotaGerman,butayoungEnglishhistorianwithadisdainfor mankindingeneral,andprofessionalsecretserviceofficersinparticular.ThemannerinwhichHugh Trevor-RoperbecamenotthenemesisofCanaris,butinsteadhisshadow,isoneofthemore remarkablestoriesofthesecretwar.Thebrilliant,testy,supremelyarrogantOxforddonwho,while nothomosexual,professedadeepdislikeofwomen,hadjustwrittenhisfirstbook,astudyof ArchbishopLaudwhichheoftenrereadduringthewaryears:‘Iamforeverdiscoveringyetmore exquisitebeauties,lurkingunsuspectedamongyetprofoundertruths.’Hespenttheyearsbetween 1940and1945monitoringthewirelesstrafficoftheAbwehr,firstforMI5thenforMI6.TrevorRoperlivedandbreathedCanarisandhisorganisation,exceptondayswhenhewentfoxhunting.In growingdegree,andcomprehensivelyfrom1943onwards,theEnglishacademiclearnedmoreabout Germany’sintelligenceservicesthananymanintheNazihighcommandknew–certainlymorethan Canarishimself,becauseTrevor-RopercouldidentifytheAbwehr ’smanyfalseinformants, controlledbytheso-called‘TwentyCommittee’ofintelligenceofficersinLondonchairedbyMI5’s J.C.Masterman.Theyoungacademicmayhavenurturedaprivatelonging,notunusualamong intellectuals,toshowhimselfalsoamanofaction.Hewasimmenselyrespectfulofalankythough never-metcousin,RichardTrevor-Roper,ownerofasmallestateinWales,whojoinedtheRAF’s BomberCommandandservedasrear-gunnertothedambustingVCGuyGibson,winningaDFMand DFCbeforebeingkilledinactiononhisfiftiethoperation,agedtwenty-nine. InDecember1939HughTrevor-Roper,thentwenty-five,wassummonedfromMertonCollegeto workalongsideWalterGill,alecturerinelectricitywhohadachievedcelebrityascollegebursarby installinglightinginMerton’squadrangles.DuringWorldWarI‘Gilly’hadservedinanarmy wirelesssectioninEgypt,whereherananaerialuptheGreatPyramid.Helistedhisrecreationsin Who’sWhoasriding,wirelessresearchand‘rebukingsin’.NowheandTrevor-Roperformedthe nucleusoftheRadioSecurityService,abranchofMI5initiallyquarteredinthecellsatWormwood ScrubsjailinwestLondon.Dayafterday,PostOfficeoperators,previouslyemployedtocatch unlicensedprivatewirelesstransmissions,scouredtheairwavesforsignalsfromenemyagents transmittingfromBritain,whomitwouldthenbetheroleoftheMertonpairtoscotch. GillandTrevor-Roperfoundthemselvesfrustratedbytheemptinessoftheether,orratherbythe absenceofsuchtrafficastheysought.Theywerefailing,soitseemed.Onlyslowlydidtheycometo understandthatthiswasnotbecausetheirowneavesdropperswereincompetent,butbecauseno Germanspiesweresignallinghome.Findingtheiroriginalfunctionredundant,ontheirowninitiative thetwodonswidenedtheirresearches:theybegantogatherinterceptsfromstationsinEuropethat usedknownAbwehrcallsigns.Oneevening,intheflattheysharedinthewestLondonsuburbof Ealing,overteaandbiscuitstheycrackedanAbwehrhand-cipher–alowerencryptionsystemused byCanaris’sbasesforcommunicationswithout-stationsandagentslackingEnigmamachines. Trevor-Roper,afluentGermanlinguist,startedtoreaditsmessages. WhenthiscametothenoticeofAlastairDenniston,chiefofBletchleyPark,hewasnotamused. TheRSS’samateursweretoldthattheyweremeddlinginmattersofnoproperconcerntothem. DennistonaddedcrosslythattheAbwehrmaterialwasunimportantanyway.Infairness,hisdismay abouttheRSS’sfreelancingreflectedmorethanpettyjealousy.Months,indeedyears,layahead beforeBletchley’scodebreakingoperationsachievedmaturity,butfromtheoutsetitwasobviousthat iftheGermansgainedaninklingofwhatwasbeingachieved,thegamewouldbeover.Themore diffusedwasBritishcryptographicactivity,thegreatertheriskofaleak.Broadwaysteppedin,tovent itsownjustifiedanger,whenitwaslearnedthatTrevor-Roper ’sreportonAbwehractivitiesinNorth AfricawascirculatedtoadistributionlistthatincludedthePostOfficewirelesssection. GillandTrevor-Roper,stubbornandmischievousmenboth,persistednonetheless;theyweresoon readingmuchoftheAbwehr ’strafficwithitsout-stations.Tothedons’glee,evenwhenBletchley establisheditsowncelltomonitorthesameCanarislinks,itwasRSSandnotGC&CSwhichbroke thenextfourhand-ciphers.Inthespringof1941RSSacquiredanewinterceptioncentrewith AmericanequipmentatHanslopeParkinBuckinghamshire,andbegantoestablishitsownoutstationsabroad.Inthecourseofthewar,thelittleservicepassedonamillionsignalstoBletchley. MI6eventuallymadeasuccessfultakeoverbidforRSS,whichwaslogical,givenBroadway’s suzeraintyoversignalsintelligence.Trevor-RoperfoundhimselfworkingwithStewartMenzies’ communicationssupremo,oneofthesecretservice’smoreexoticfigures,ColonelRichardGambierParry.Thecolonelwasoneofmanyluminariesof‘secretshows’whowasabletoexploittohisown advantagetheirfreedomfromaccountabilitytoaservicehierarchy.Gambier-ParryestablishedMI6’s communicationscentreatWhaddonHallinBuckinghamshire,whichhealsomadehispersonal residence.Akeenhorseman,hetookoverthepre-warowner ’spackofhoundsandplacedthe huntsmenonBroadway’spayroll;ononenotableoccasion,thehoundsinhotpursuitstreamed throughthesecuritygateofBletchleyPark,arousinginthemindofamountedspectatorintheknow aboutitsactivitiesanidyllicvisionofthebrutesgorgingonhalf-digesteddecrypts.Gambier-Parry livedlikeamedievalbaron.Trevor-Roper,whoknewhimasafellow-foxhunter,marvelled:‘Inthe worldofneuroticpolicemenandtimidplacemenwhorulethesecretservice,hemoveslikeFalstaff, orsomefigurefromBalzac,ifnotRabelais.’ItshouldbeaddedthatfortherestofthewarGambierParryranMI6’scommunicationswithenergyandflair. HughTrevor-RoperbecameheadoftheintelligencesectionofMI6’sRadioAnalysisBureau,run byFelixCowgill,aformerIndianpoliceman.Cowgillintenselydislikedhisnewjunior,whomhe deemedguiltyof‘irreverentthoughtsanddangerouscontacts’.TheOxfordhistoriantookitupon himselftogowellbeyondtheproductionofrawintelligence,conductingevaluationandanalysisina fashionMI6hadalwaysspurned,becauseitlackedofficerscleverenoughtodosuchwork.TheRAB begantoproduce‘purpleprimers’,localguidestoAbwehrpersonalitiesandagentsaroundthe world,whichsoonrantomanypages.ThebureaunotedthattheItalians,whobeforethewarhad enjoyedsomenotableintelligencesuccesses,werenowalmostentirelydependentformaterialonthe Germans,andthusacquiredtheirweaknesses. Inthesummerof1941Trevor-Roperacquiredanassistant,twenty-one-year-oldCharlesStuart, whohadjustleftChristChurchwithaFirstinhistory,andthetwowerejoinedbyanotherOxford man,GilbertRyle.PatrickReilly,agiftedyoungdiplomatwhobecameStewartMenzies’personal assistant,thoughttheirlittlecell‘ateamofabrillianceunparalleledanywhereintheIntelligence machine’.Trevor-RoperbegantoserveassecretaryofthejointMI5–MI6WirelessCommittee,in whichrolehecametoknowalmosteveryonesignificantinthesecretworld.Thepeering, bespectacledhistorianbecameoneoftheoutstandingBritishintelligenceofficersofthewar.His masteryofGermanoperationsincreasedsteadily,especiallyafterBletchley’sDillwynKnoxbroke intotheprincipalAbwehrmachinecipherinDecember1941.WhilethechiefsofBroadwaybelieved –moresofollowingtheVenlofiasco–thattheirenemies’intelligenceofficerswerewizardsof guile,fromanearlystageTrevor-RoperbecameconvincedoftheGermans’institutional incompetence.AsfortheAbwehr ’schief,hesaid,farfrombeingamasterspyCanariswasalostlittle mandriftingonthetidesoffate. AdmiralWilhelmCanariscamefromafamilyofRhinelandindustrialists.AfterserviceasaU-boat officerinWorldWarIhebecameengagedinright-wingpolitics,whileplayingaroleinrebuilding theGermannavy.Aseniorofficer ’s1926personalreportextolledhisskillsatthemilitary-political interface:‘Withthefinestfeelforforeignpsychologyandmentality,togetherwithuncommon linguisticability,heknowsinexemplaryfashionhowtodealwithforeigners(fromthelowesttothe prominent).’Interestingly,however,othernavalofficers,includingErichRaederandKarlDönitz, dislikedCanaris,thinkinghimsly. DuringtheearlyyearsofHitler ’sruleheingratiatedhimselfenthusiasticallyandsuccessfullywith theforemostNazis.In1935,agedforty-eight,hewasappointedchiefofGermany’sintelligence service,controllingbothespionageabroadandcounter-espionageathome,thoughHimmlerranhis owndomesticsecurityservice,theRSHA,underErnstKaltenbrunner,withtheGestapoasits enforcementarm.AsTrevor-Ropernoted,‘AllGermanpoliticiansofconsequencesoughttosetup theirowninformationbureaus(justastheyalsosoughttoestablishprivatearmies)asadditional supportsfortheirpersonalauthority;anditwasessentialtothepurposeofthesebureausthattheir resultsshouldbetheprivatepropertyoftheirchiefs.’ TheRSHAwasnomoreefficientthantheAbwehr,butitwieldedmoreinfluencethroughitsdirect subordinationtoHimmler.MI6notedthatitachievedgoodpenetrationofneutralembassiesinBerlin, whichyieldedusefulinformation.Meanwhile,Canaris’sservicehadstationsaroundtheworldand intelligencecellswithineveryformationoftheWehrmacht.Theadmiral’searlyyearsofofficesawa dramaticexpansionofhisempire;heachievedareputationforadministrativeefficiencyand diplomaticskills,bothinhishandlingoftheNazihierarchyandindealingwithprominentforeigners. Untilatleast1942,theservice’sprestigestoodhighbothinsideGermanyandabroad. Canariswasinstinctivelysecretive,evenbeforehebecameaspymaster,andmoresothereafter. WithintheramblingwarrenofofficesinarowofconvertedmansionsonBerlin’sTirpitzüfer,where theAbwehrhaditsheadquartersuntilitwasbombedoutin1943,heseemedtoglidealmostinvisibly fromoneroomtoanother.Sohedidtooonhisfrequenttravelstoothercountries,especiallySpain:a signedportraitofFranco,itsdictator,adornedhisofficewall.Heseldomworeuniform–anoddity inNazisociety,whichwasobsessedwithfancydress.Hewaselaboratelycourteous,notleastto subordinates,andsomethingofahypochondriacwhotooktoomanypills.Herelaxedbyriding regularlyandplayingasmartgameoftennis.Hispassionforanimalswasmuchremarked:hewas followedaroundAbwehrheadquartersbytwodachshunds,towhichhetalkedconstantly.Oneofthem oncefellillwhileCanariswasvisitingItaly,andhetelephonedatlengthtoBerlintodiscussits condition.HisItaliancompanionsassumedthathewasspeakingincodeaboutgreatissuesofstate, buthisobsessionwiththedogwasauthentic.Heoftensaidthathetrustedanimalsmorethanpeople;it wasprobablymoreaccuratetosaythathelikedthembetter.Inconversation,whetherprofessionalor social,hewasamasterofequivocation.FewpeoplewereeversurewhatCanarisreallythought, whichwassupposedbycontemporariestoreflecthisdepthofcharacter.Morelikely,itmasked chronicindecision. AlthoughtechnicallyabranchofOKW,theAbwehrquicklybecameCanaris’spersonalfiefdom. Throughoutthewarhismenachievedconsiderablesuccessinsuppressingdissentandcapturing WesternAlliedagentsoperatinginHitler ’sempire,whichdidmuchtosustaintheadmiral’sstanding inNazihighplaces:Col.FranzvonBentevegni,whorancounter-espionage,wasoneofCanaris’sfew impressivesubordinateappointments.YettheRussianswereabletosustaintheirastonishing espionageactivitiesinsideGermanyuntil1942,andmilitaryleakagespersisteduntil1945,evenifthe hugematterofGermany’sbrokencodeslaybeyondCanaris’sremit. Theagentshisofficersdispatchedtogatherinformationabroadwerealmostallunfitfortherole.It isoddthatBerlinneverattemptedtorecruitspiestodispatchtoBritainwhomighthavepassedfor gentlemen.Evenin1940,theaccentandmannersoftheupperclassremainedapassporttosocial acceptanceinChurchill’sembattledisland.ThewriterCyrilConnollywroteanangrylettertotheNew Statesmancomplainingthatwhenhehimselfwasdetainedasapossiblespy,hewasimmediately releasedwhenitwasdiscoveredthathehadbeeneducatedatEton.TheexperienceoftheCambridge Spies,deemedbeyondsuspicionasmembersoftheupper-middleclass,suggeststhatiftheAbwehr haddispatchedtoBritainafewNaziswithpassabletablemannersandsomeskillasfly-castersor grouse-shooters,theywouldhavebeenaskedtoallthebesthouses. Asitwas,however,whentwoofCanaris’skeymen,Col.HansPieckenbrock,theheadof intelligence,andCol.ErwinLahousen,headofsabotage,weresackedin1943,thiswasnogestureof Nazispite,madeforpoliticalreasons;itwastheconsequenceoftheirobviousincompetenceandof theirdepartments’failure.Germansecretoperationsabroaddeployedimmenselabourfornegligible results.OneoftheAbwehr ’smostnotablerecruitswasnavallieutenantHeinrichGarbers.Hewasa vegetablefarmer ’sson,apassionateNazi,whoin1938hadsailedacrosstheAtlanticinathirty-foot yacht,theWindspiel,whichheconstructedhimself.AmidtheAlliednavalblockade,theGermans devisedthenotionofdispatchingagentstofar-flungplacesinsailingboatstoohumbletoattractthe attentionoftheenemy.In1941and1942GarbersmadeepicforaystoSouthAfricaandNamibia respectively.ThereafterhecaptainedthelittleschoonerPassim,whichmadetwoimmensevoyagesat anaveragespeedofsixknots.TheboatsailedunderthenameoftheSantaMaria,andflew successivelyFrench,SpanishandPortuguesecoloursasGarbersdeemedappropriate.In1943he carriedthreeAbwehrmen,codenamed‘Walter ’,‘Fred’and‘Jim’,toArgentina,inwhatheafterwards describedlaconicallyas‘anuneventfulvoyageof65days’. Inanauticalsenseitmaybetruethatnothingmuchhappened,butrelationsonboardwerepoisoned bythemutualloathingofWalterandFred,whileJimwasperpetuallyprostratewithsea-sickness, whichcosthimadrasticweightloss.Thepassengersweresuccessfullydeliveredtoareception committeeofArgentinesympathisersatRiodelPlata,whopresentedthePassim’screwwithcoffee andorangesbeforethelittlevesselturnedaboutandsailedhome.Garbers,plainlyamanofiron, seemedwhollyuntroubledbyhisexperiences.HereturnedsafelytoEuropeandreceivedthe Ritterkreuz.Thereisnoevidence,however,thathispassengerscontributedanythingtotheNaziwar effort.Likewise,theHungarianairforceofficerCountLászlóAlmásycrossed2,000milesofNorth AfricandeserttodelivertwoagentstoEgyptinMay1942,aremarkableachievement,andAlmásy laterinspiredthenovelandfilmTheEnglishPatient,thoughitsversionofthisenthusiasticNaziwas fanciful.Hispassengers,however,didnothingonarrivaltojustifytheirepicjourney.Nearerhome,it becameincreasinglycleartotheBritishmonitoringtheAbwehr ’swirelessedreportsthatitsnetwork ofoverseasstationsandinformantsproducedalmostnothingthatwasbothnewandtrue. AsTrevor-Roperpursuedhisresearchesthroughtheever-growingharvestofBletchleydecrypts, ‘Wesoonbecameawarethat“thelittleAdmiral”wasafarmorecomplexandcontroversialcharacter thanwehadsupposed.Astheincompetenceofhisorganisationwasprogressivelyrevealedtous,we discovered,ordeduced,somethingofthepoliticsinwhichhewasinvolved,andwenotedhisfeverish travels,ineverydirection,butespeciallytoSpain,whichdistinguishedhimsharplyfromourown moresedentarychief’–StewartMenzies.Forseveraldecadesafterthewar,Canariswastreatedasa majorfigureoftheera,thesubjectofseveralweightybiographies.Theforemostelementinthe CanarismythologywasaclaimthathehadbeenasecretcrusaderagainstHitler,whohadgivenactive assistancetotheAlliedcause.SeveralGermanwritersenergeticallypromotedthisview,becausetheir post-warsocietywasdesperatetoidentifyvirtuousmenwhohaddaredtoraisetheirhandsagainstthe vastevilofNazism,andsufferedmartyrdominconsequence. Itisnowplainthatsuchclaimswereunfounded.Until1938Canariswasanardentsupporterofthe Nazis,andforyearsthereafterHitlerfrequentlyusedhimasapersonalemissaryabroad.Theadmiral workedamicablywithReinhardHeydrichoftheRSHA.Thetwofamiliessocialised:FrauCanaris andtheexecutiveplanneroftheHolocaustsometimesplayedtheviolintogether.From1939onwards, theadmiralbecameincreasinglygloomyandnervous–colleaguesnotedhimdrinkingheavily. Trevor-RoperregardeditasanabsurddelusionthatCanariswasthedirectingbrainof‘theother Germany’.TheAbwehr ’schief,inhisview,wasamanoflimitedgifts,whoconfinedhisanti-Nazi activitiestomakinghisorganisationahavenforofficerswhosharedhisrisingdistasteforHitlerand hissupporters,andwhoresistedactivecomplicityintheNazis’atrocities.Canaris’sfastidiousnature recoiledfromthecoarsenessoftheirconduct,perhapsmorethanfromitsinsensatebarbarity. TheonlyAbwehrofficerknowntohavebeenasourceforMI6wasHans-BerndtGiseviusin Switzerland,aPrussianlawyerofgiantphysicalproportionswhoservedfiveyearsintheGestapo andhatedit,beforetransferringtotheMinistryofInternalAffairsin1938andthencetotheAbwehr. CanarissenthimtoZürichunderdiplomaticcoverasvice-consul,andthereafterhepassed informationtoHalinaSzymańska,whomheknewwasaninformantforbothBritishandPolish intelligence.Giseviusprovidedmaterialfortwenty-fivereportsdispatchedfromBerntoBroadway betweenAugust1940andDecember1942,someofthemcitingCanaris’sprofessedopinions;also amonghissourceswasHitler ’sfinanceminister,HjalmarSchacht. Szymańska,theconduit,wastheformidableandbeautifulwifeoftheformerPolishmilitaryattaché inBerlin,andoncedinedwithCanarisinBern.MuchofGisevius’smaterialwasaccurate:inJanuary 1941SzymańskapassedonhisreportaboutGermanaircraftstocks,togetherwiththeAbwehrman’s opinionthataninvasionofBritainwas‘off’.InAprilshequotedGisevius’sview,basedon informationfromSchacht,thatHitlerwouldinvadeRussiaduringthefollowingmonth–which indeedwasthenhisintention.But,asusualwithintelligence,theGermanalsopassedonsome rubbish:on28March1941hetoldSzymańskathatGermanforceswouldnottaketheoffensivein Libya–twodaysbeforeRommellaunchedamajoronslaught. Gisevius’scontribution,andthoseofahandfulofhiscolleagues,scarcelymadetheAbwehra pillarofResistanceagainsttheNazis.Itswartimeshortcomingsweretheproductofindolenceand incompetenceratherthanofconsideredtreachery.Canariswasapoordelegator,whochoseweak subordinates.Germanintelligencehadonenotablesuccessabroad,insuborningYugoslavofficers aheadoftheirarmy’s1941emergencymobilisation,intimetosabotagetheprocess,butthereafterits espionageoperationswereuniformlyunsuccessful.TheadmiralwasnonethelesstoomuchaGerman patriotactivelytoassisthiscountry’senemies.Likemanysuchpeopleofthetime,heharboured muddledpoliticalviews.Amonarchistandaconservative,Franco’sSpainwashisspiritualhome;he travelledthereasoftenashecould,notmerelytovisitthelargeMadridAbwehrHQatCalleClaudio Coello151,butalsotocommunewithlike-mindedSpanishpoliticiansandgrandees.TheAbwehr ’s ship-watchingserviceinSpain,theUnternehmenBodden,monitoringAlliedmovementsthroughthe StraitsofGibraltarwiththeaidofadvancedinfra-redtechnology,andreportingthemtothe KriegsmarineandtheLuftwaffe’sAirFleet1inItaly,formedthemostimpressiveelementinthe organisation’soverseasoperations. YetifCanarisbearsmuchresponsibilityfortheshortcomingsofGermany’s‘bigpicture’ intelligence,hecouldneverhaverunanhonestoperationunderthedeadhandofHitler,anymore thanMoscowCentrecoulddosointheshadowofStalin.Reportsontheconditionandprospectsof theenemywerepermittedtoreachconclusionsonlywithinparametersacceptabletotheFührer.This cripplingconstraintwassymbolisedbyHitler ’sannotationonanimportantintelligencereportabout Russianagriculturalconditions:‘Thiscannotbe.’KurtZeitzler,chiefofthearmygeneralstaff,wrote on23October1942,theeveofStalingrad:‘TheRussiansnolongerhaveanyreservesworth mentioningandarenotcapableoflaunchinglarge-scaleoffensives.’Himmlerin1944declared withoutembarrassmentthathisfirstrequirementfromGermany’sintelligenceserviceswasnottruth, butloyaltytotheFührer.Thiswasanimportantstatement,themostvividexpressionofthehuge weaknessoftheAbwehrandtheRSHAthroughouttheSecondWorldWar. HistorianMichaelHandelhaswritten:‘Leadersinademocraticsystemaregenerallymoreinclined toconsiderawidevarietyofoptionsthanthosewhohavealwaysfunctionedwithinauthoritarianor totalitarianpoliticalsystems.Inauthoritariancountries,wheretheclimbtothetopisanunrelenting struggleforpower,habitsofcooperationandopennessareusuallylessdeveloped…Tolerancefor ideasthatdeviatefromthe“partyline”…areseenaspersonalcriticism.’Thesefeaturesofalmostall dictatorshipscrippledGermanintelligenceactivitiesbeyondthebattlefield,andsometimesalso withinit.Himmler ’sdeputyReinhardHeydrich,forinstance,wasfarmoreinterestedinusingthe RSHAasaweaponagainsttheNaziempire’sinternalenemiesthanasameansofsecuring informationaboutitsforeignfoes.Hitlerneverwishedtouseintelligenceasaplanningorpolicymakingtool.Herecogniseditsutilityonlyatatacticallevel:theNaziswerestrikinglyincuriousabout Abroad. YetthefactthattheAbwehrwasanunsuccessfulintelligence-gatheringorganisationdidnotmean thatHitler ’sarmedforceswereblindonthebattlefield:theiraccesstotacticalintelligencewas generallygood.InthefirsthalfofthewarGermany’swirelessinterceptorsandcodebreakersenjoyed successeswhichwouldtodayseemimpressive,weretheynotmeasuredagainstthoseoftheBritish andAmericans.TheWehrmachthadexcellentvoice-monitoringunits,whichineverytheatreofwar providedimportantinformation.‘TheYServicewasthebestsourceofintelligence,’saidHans-Otto Behrendt,oneofRommel’sstaffinNorthAfrica.InAugust1941,aidedbyanItalianemployee,two agentsoftheSezionePrelevamento–the‘extractionsection’ofItalianintelligence–openedthesafe ofthemilitaryattaché’sofficeattheUSembassyinRome.Theyremovedhiscodebook–Military IntelligenceCodeNo.11–andphotographedit.ThisenabledtheAxistoreadsubstantialtraffic throughtheensuingtenmonths,andprovedaseriouslysignificantintelligencebreak.In1942ithad especiallygrievousconsequencesforEighthArmyinthedesert,sincetheUSmilitaryattachéin Cairo,Col.BonnerFellers,reportedindetailtoWashingtononBritishplansandintentions.A Germanintelligenceofficerpaidgeneroustributeto‘thisincomparablesourceofauthenticand reliableinformation,which…contributedsodecisivelyduringthefirsthalfof1942toourvictories inNorthAfrica’. Atsea,someoftheRoyalNavy’scipherswerefoundaboardtheBritishsubmarineSeal,captured offtheGermancoaston5May1940,owingtoanextraordinaryandculpablefailurebythe minelayer ’sofficerstodestroyitsconfidentialpapers.TheKriegsmarinewasabletoreadmuchof theRoyalNavy’sNorthSeatrafficuntilAugust1940,andsomewarshipcommunicationsuntil September1941.Throughoutthefirsthalfofthewar,theKriegsmarine’sB-DienstreadtheRoyal Navy’sconvoycodes,withgrievousconsequencesforAlliedshippinglosses.Evenwheresignals couldnotbedecrypted,radio-trafficanalysisenabledAxisintelligencestaffstojudgeenemy deploymentsremarkablyeffectively,atleastuntilthesecondhalfofthewar,whenAllied commandersbecamemoreastuteandsecurity-conscious.Patrolling,airreconnaissanceandPoW interrogationsallprovidedstreamsofusefuldatatoGermanoperationalcommanders,asdidopensourceinformation–enemynewspaperandbroadcastmonitoring. Inthefirstphaseofthewaruntil1942,whiletheWehrmachtwastriumphantonbattlefieldsacross Europe,thesesourcessufficedtotellitscommandersallthattheyfelttheyneededtoknowaboutthe world,andabouttheirenemies.VictoriesmaskedtheabjecthumintfailuresoftheAbwehr.Aslongas Germanywaswinning,whyshouldanyonemaketroubleaboutimperfectionsinthewarmachine?It wasonlywhenHitler ’sarmiesstartedlosingthathardquestionsbegantobeaskedabouttheReich’s abysmalpoliticalandstrategicintelligence.Hitlerhimselfwas,ofcourse,muchtoblame,butCanaris exercisedoperationalresponsibility.Theadmiralfellfromgrace,thoughitwasbythenfartoolate– probablyimpossible,forreasonsinstitutionalisedintheNazisystem–torepairhiscorruptand ineffectiveespionageorganisation. Whileanxiousnottobeabadman,Canarislackedthecouragetobeagoodone.Farfrombeinga substantialhistoricalfigure,hewasasmallone,grapplingwithdilemmasanddifficultiesfarbeyond hiscapabilities.Trevor-RoperprofessedtoseeacloseresemblancebetweentheadmiralandMenzies, hisBritishcounterpart.Bothmenwereconservative,honourable–andweak.Byatrifling coincidence,CanarishadamistressinViennawhosesisterwasmarriedtoMenzies’brother.TrevorRopercametoregardtheAbwehras‘amirrorimageof[MI6],withmanyofthesameweaknesses andabsurdities…Irecognised,acrosstheinterveningfogofwar,oldfriendsofBroadwayand WhaddonHalltransmutedintoGermanuniformintheTirpitzUferoratWansee.’Theadmiraldid littletomerithiseventualfateatthehandsofHitler ’sexecutioners:hefrequentlytalkedtreason,but didnothingtofurtherit.Farfrombecomingamartyrtothecauseofa‘goodGermany’,hewas merelyanincompetentservantofanevilone. 3 MiraclesTakeaLittleLonger:Bletchley 1 ‘ TI P S ’A ND ‘ C I LLI S ’ Inthewinterof1939,MI6cameunderscrutinyandfiercecriticismwithinWhitehall,intensifiedby theVenlofiasco.StewartMenzies,knowingtheprecariousnessofhispositionas‘C’,compileda twenty-six-pagedocumentdefendinghisservice,inwhichheriskedplayingonecardwhichmight– anddid–savehisbacon.Hepromisedhismastersthatthecountrywas‘abouttoreapthefruits’of MI6’sliaisonwithAlliedsecretservicesinafashion‘whichshouldbeofinestimablebenefitstothe AirMinistrywithinafewweeks,andprobablytotheAdmiraltywithinamonthortwo’.The significanceofthisvaguelyexpressedclaimwasthatMenziesbelievedthatBletchleyPark,withthe helpoftheFrenchandPoles,wasclosetocrackingsomeGermanciphers.Suchsuccessescouldgo farindeedtowardscompensatingforMI6’shumintfailure.Hisexpectationswouldremainunfulfilled formuchoftheyearthatfollowed.Fewevenwithintheintelligencecommunitydaredtohopethat Britaincouldemulate,farlesssurpass,the1914–18triumphsofRoom40.AdmiralGodfrey,headof navalintelligence,wrotetoMenzieson18November,sayingthat‘whetherornotCryptanalysiswill everagaingiveustheknowledgewehadofGermanmovementsinthelatewar ’,MI6shouldexert itselftoplantagentsinenemyportstoreportshippingmovements.Godfreydidnotseemtoexpect muchfromthecodebreakers. Inpeacetime,fewnationscommittheirfinestbrainstonationalsecurity.Brilliantpeopleseldom choosecareersinintelligence–or,forthatmatter,inthearmedforces.Astrugglefornational survivalalonemakesitpossibleforagovernmenttomobilisegenius,orpeoplepossessing somethingclosetoit,intheinterestsofthewareffort.TheBritish,andlatterlytheAmericans,didthis moreeffectivelythananyotherparticipantsinWorldWarII.Aremarkableproportionoftheir nations’brightestandbestsoonerorlaterfoundthemselvesperformingtasksworthyoftheirtalents– inhigherarmystaffpostsalongsidethelikesofEnochPowell,JohnFreeman,TobyAldington;in scientificortechnicalresearch;andespeciallyinintelligence,whichabsorbedthousandsof outstandingintellectsfrommanywalksoflife.TheoutbreakofwarenabledtheGermansectionof Britishmilitaryintelligence,forinstance,torecruitsuchwritersandacademicsasNoelAnnan,Eric BirleyandAlanPryce-Jones.Annan,aCambridgedonwhohadonlyapassableacquaintancewith GermanandFrench,observedwonderingly:‘WithinaweekIwaspiecingtogetherthereportsof agentsintheBalkansandtheearlystutteringsofUltra.’ DonaldMcLachlan,ajournalistwhoservedunderGodfreyattheAdmiralty,afterwardsarguedthat allwartimeintelligencedepartmentsshouldberunbyciviliansinuniform,becausetheyare unburdenedbythelifetimeprejudicesofcareersoldiers,sailorsandairmen:‘Itisthelawyer,the scholar,thetraveller,thebanker,eventhejournalistwhoshowstheabilitytoresistwherethecareer mentendtobend.Careerofficersandpoliticianshaveastronginterestincookingrawintelligenceto maketheirmasters’favouritedishes.’MI6remaineduntil1945undertheleadershipofitsoldhands, butmostofBritain’ssecretwarmachinepassedintothehandsofableciviliansinuniformwho– afteranintervalofmonthsorinsomecasesyearswhiletheyweretrainedandtheirskillsrecognised –progressivelyimprovedthequalityofintelligenceanalysis.TheAdmiralty’sSubmarineTracking RoomwasdirectedbyRodgerWinn,abarristerandfuturejudge.Gen.SirBernardMontgomery’s chiefofintelligencefromAlameintoLuneburgHeathwastheOxforddonEdgar‘Bill’Williams, latterlyabrigadier.RegJonesmadehimselfalegendinscientificintelligence. Thesemen,andafewhundredothersthroughoutthearmedforces,spentmuchofthewar exploitingandassessinginformationderivedoverwhelminglyfrominterceptionanddecryptionof theenemy’swirelesstraffic.BillWilliams,whoservedintheMediterraneanuntil1943andinEurope thereafter,statedinanimportant1945report:‘ItmustbemadequiteclearthatUltraandUltraonlyput intelligenceonthemap.’Untildecryptsbegantobecomeavailableinbulkin1942,‘Intelligencewas theCinderellaofthestaff…Informationabouttheenemywasfrequentlytreatedasinterestingrather thanvaluable[though]ofcoursethisattitudevariedaccordingtothecommander.’ Scepticismwasoftenmerited,becausemuchmaterialwasdownrightspecious.The1940wardiary ofthearmy’sMiddleEastintelligencesectioninCairoincludedcomicallyfrivoloussnippets:‘All HungariancabaretartisteshavebeenorderedtoleavethecountrybytheendofMay.’Dataaboutthe Italianarmywasscanty,sothaton9Augustthesectionrecorded:‘Thepresentlocationand organisationofLibyantroopsinEasternCyrenaicaisobscure.’Adespondentstaffofficeraddeda weeklater:‘Therehasbeennofurtherreliableinformationoffresh[Italian]groundunitsor formationsarrivinginLibyafromoverseas.’On27September,theBritishhighcommand’sweekly intelligencesummaryincludedaparagraphondomesticconditionsinGermany:‘Aneutraltraveller totheLeipsicfair,whosepersonalobservationsarebelievedreliable,reportsthatrelationsbetween the[Nazi]PartyandtheArmyarenotgood.’Threemonthslater,theheadofMI6’sPoliticalSection wrunghishands:‘Itispiteoustofindourselvesinthisstateofignorance’aboutbothGermany’s internalconditionandeconomy. OnlywhenAlliedwarlordswereempoweredtoreadthemessagesbeingexchangedbetween enemygeneralsinthefieldandtheirhigherheadquarterswasscepticismaboutthevalueof ‘intelligence’replacedbyincreasinglyferventbelief.Ultraforcedcommanders-in-chief,notto mentiontheprimeminister,totreatseniorintelligenceofficerswitharespecttheyhadseldom receivedinthepre-Bletchleyuniverse.BrigadierIanJacobofthewarcabinetsecretariatsaid:‘My impressionisthatoncetheUltrabusinessgotwell-established,Churchilldidn’tlookatanythingelse.’ Eisenhower ’sintelligencechiefKennethStrongwrotein1943,inamemorandumontrainingstaff officers:‘Wenolongerdependonagentsandcloak-and-daggersourcesforourinformation.Modern methodshavecompletelytransformedintelligence.’ Hemeantcodebreaking,ofcourse,andinBritainthefountainheadofsuchactivitywasthe GovernmentCode&CypherSchoolatBletchley.Inthemonthsfollowingtheoutbreakofwar, GC&CSexpandeddramaticallywiththearrivalofastreamofacademics,manyofthemearmarked byitsrecruitersbeforethewar.Thoughsomeweresecondedfromthearmedforces,itwas understoodthattherewasnoneedtotraintheuniversities’contingenttomarch,blancowebbing,and namethepartsofarifle.Theyremainedtheirsallow,tweedy,pipe-smokingyoungselveswhen housedinlodgingsaroundthedrearysuburbantown,andenlistedonthegovernmentpayrollwithout uniformorceremony.Twenty-year-oldmathematicianKeithBateyfoundhislandladydemandingan assurancefromhisemployerthathewasnotadespised‘conchy’–conscientiousobjector–beforehe joinedthegrowingbodyofacademicsworkingonataskofsupremeimportancetotheircountry, fulfilmentofwhichmightdosomethingtoassuageitsshockingvulnerability.Whatwasthetask? Bletchley’slittleband,169strongin1939includingsupportstaff,understoodonlythatthenation’s enemiescommunicatedinamultitudeofcodesandciphers,vulnerabletointerception.Ifevena portionofthesecombinationsofnumbersandletterscouldberenderedintelligible,information mightbegainedofpricelessvaluetothewareffort. Nobodyknew,inthebeginning,whetheragivenmessagehijackedfromtheairwavesmightbean orderfromHitlerforhisarmiestomarchonWarsaw,orarequestfromaLuftwaffeairfieldin easternGermanyforadeliveryoffilingcabinets.Aheadofthecodebreakerslayamammothmenuof requirementswhichcouldonlybeaddressedasmobilisationsluggishlymadeavailableears,brains andhandstomonitortheenemy’sfrequenciesaroundtheclock,logsomeofhisvastoutputof messages,fixthelocationsandpossibleidentitiesofthesenders–diplomatic,police,military,naval orairforce.Thencamethemuchgreaterchallenge,ofdiscoveringwhatthemessagesmeant. Allradiocommunicationsinvolvedatrade-offbetweenspeedandsecurity.Atthesimplestlevel, battlefielddirectionbyland,seaandairrequiredsomevoicelinkage.Thisenabledtheinstantaneous passageofordersandinformation,atthecostofbeingoverheardbyanybodyelsewhocaredtotune toagivenfrequency.Crudesecuritycouldbeintroducedbyusingcodedcallsignsinplaceofnames andsuchlike–duringtheBattleofBritainfightercontrollersadded5,000feettoindicatedaltitudes, toconfuseeavesdroppers.Butvoicemessagingwasinherentlyinsecure:sensitiveinformationshould neverbepassedverbally,thoughitoftenwas. MostmilitarymessageswereinsteadwirelessedbyMorsekey.Low-levelmaterialcouldberapidly encryptedunderbattlefieldconditionsbyrelativelyunsophisticatedpersonnelusingso-calledhandorfield-ciphers,usuallyinvolvinggroupsoftwoorthreelettersornumbers–theKriegsmarine employedtwenty-sevenvariants.Moresensitivetraffic,issuingfromhigherechelons,wastranslated bymachine-generatedormanualciphers,usuallyinvolvingcombinationsoffourorfivelettersor numbers.TheBritishthoughtjustifiablyhighlyofthesecurityoftheirType-Xmachines,thoughthey neverhadenoughofthem.*TheAmericansrightlytrustedtheirSigaba,afifteen-rotorsystem. Forsubstantialperiodsbetween1939and1943theGermansbrokesomeAlliedcodes,including thoseoftheUSStateDepartmentandmilitaryattachés,alongwiththetrafficofseveralexile governments,notablythePolesandFreeFrench.Theysometimesalsoaccessedmessagesofallthree Britishservices,includingtheRAF’sfour-charactercipher,andlaterhadsuccessesinattacking productsoftheUSArmy’sM-209field-cipheringmachine.ItdeservesemphasisthatAlliedcodesecurityweaknesses,andenemyachievementsinexploitingthem,gavetheGermansmuchmore operationalassistancethansomeWesternhistoriansacknowledge,especiallyintheBattleofthe Atlantic.However,higherBritish,AmericanandRussiancommunicationsdefiedenemyscrutiny: NazieavesdroppingontransatlantictelephoneconversationsbetweenChurchillandRoosevelttold Berlinlittleofvalue.ModernclaimsthattheGermansbrokeintoRussianhigherciphersdeserveto betreatedwithcaution:certainlyfrom1942onwards,thereisnoevidencethatHitler ’sgenerals profitedfromanysuchinsights;iftheyhad,theywouldhavebeenlessoftendeludedbySoviet deceptions. MostGermanseniorofficers–thoughbynomeansalltheircryptographers–wereconfidentthat Enigmacipheringmachines,whichscrambledmessagesbymeansofshiftingrotorsandaplugboard, andrenderedthemcomprehensibleonlybyamatchingmachinewithidenticalsettings,wereimmune totheattentionofanyenemy,andindeedtotheworkingsofthehumanbrain.Itisunsurprisingthatin 1939theydiscountedthepossibilitythatelectro-mechanicaltechnologymightdramaticallyaccelerate exposureoftheEnigma’ssecrets,becauseitdidnotthenexist.Itisextraordinary,however,thatsuch sereneconfidencepersistedthroughsixyearsthatfollowed,evenfollowingthediscoverythatthe Poleshadbrokensomepre-warEnigmatraffic,andseveralwarningsfromtheirownexperts. AmazinghubriswasexpressedbytheWehrmacht’slastsignalschief,Lt.Gen.AlbertPraun,who preenedhimselfbeforehisAlliedcaptorsafterthewarended:‘TheachievementsofGerman communicationsintelligence…mayspeakinfavouroftheGermantypeofintelligence organisation.’Hisorganisation,hesaid,‘gaveGermancommandersahithertounattaineddegreeof [signal]security’. TheBritishbreakingoftheEnigma,thensubsequentlyandseparatelyofGermanteleprintertraffic, wasaprogressive,incrementaloperationwhichattainedmaturityonlybetween1943and1945,and wasneveruninterruptedorcomprehensive:evenatpeaks,onlyabouthalfofallinterceptswereread, manyofthemtoolatetoprovidepracticalassistance‘atthesharpend’.WhatwasdoneatBletchley Parkwasindeedmiraculous,butthecodebreakerswereneverabletowalkonallofthewater,allof thetime. The1939–40PhoneyWarconferredfewbenefitsonBritain,butitgrantedGC&CSprecioustime tobolsteritsstrengthandrefineitsmethods.WithoutmechanicalaidsBletchley’sbrainstormersmade modestanddelayedbreachesinasmallnumberofenemyciphers.TheGermansemployedacronyms andcodenameswhichtookweeksormonthsfortheirenemiestointerpret.Theimportanceofwhat happenedatBletchleyinthefirsttwoyearsofwarwasnotthatitenabledBritain’sgeneralstoavert orarrestadisastrousrunofdefeats,whichitcertainlydidnot,butthatitlitacandleofhopeabout whatthecodebreakersandtheirembryotechnologymightaccomplishinthefuture.Itenabledthe directorsofthewarefforttolayupontheboardafewscatteredpiecesofavastjigsaw,whichwould befilledonlyduringtheAllies’yearsofvictory. BletchleyPark–StationX,Box111c/oTheForeignOffice–wasanotablyuglyVictorianpileof bastardarchitecturaloriginssurroundedbyfifty-fiveacresoftreesandgrassland,locatedfiftymiles fromLondon.Itwaspurchasedin1938tohouseGC&CSatasafedistancefromGermanbombsby AdmiralSirHughSinclair,thenheadofMI6;aslegendhasit,heused£7,500outofhisownpocket, butmoreplausiblyhepaidwithsecretfundsunderhiscontrol.WhateverMI6’shumintweaknesses, theservice’schiefs,especiallySinclair,deservefullcreditforbackingtheestablishmentofBletchley atatimewhenresourcesweredesperatelyconstrained.Workbeganatonceonlayingdirectphone andteleprinterlinestoLondon,andinthefollowingyearMI6’sskeletonteamofcryptanalystsmoved fromBroadwaytothePark,wheretheycameundertheordersofAlastairDenniston.Oneofhis colleaguesfromtheoldAdmiraltydays,DillwynKnox,anexpertonancientEgyptianpapyri,became anearlyBletchleystalwart.ThemostprominentoftheyoungerrecruitswereGordonWelchmanof SidneySussexCollege,Cambridge,HughAlexander,StuartMilner-Barry,JohnJeffreys–andAlan Turing. Thislast,thetwenty-seven-year-oldsonofanIndiancivilservantandtheproductofanaustereand emotionallyaridchildhood,hadjustreturnedfromastintatPrincetonclutchingoneofhisown creations,aso-calledelectricmultipliermachinemountedonabreadboard.Hisheadmasterat Sherbornehadoncewritten:‘Ifheistostayatapublicschool,hemustaimatbecomingeducated.If heistobesolelyaScientificSpecialist,thenheiswastinghistime.’Intheheadmaster ’sterms,Turing hadindeedbeen‘wastinghistime’:hehadevolvedintoashy,narrow,obsessive.NoelAnnanwrote: ‘Ilikedhissly,secrethumour…Hisinnerlifewasmorerealtohimthanactuality.Hedisliked authoritywhereverhewas…[and]enjoyedgamesandtreasurehuntsandsilliness…Turingwasthe puresttypeofhomosexual,longingforaffectionandlovethatlasted.’Moreeventhanbyhissexuality andhisoftenchildlikeimmaturity,however,histragedywastobeafflictedbytheexquisitelypainful lonelinessofgenius. Otherdraftsofyoungacademicsfollowed,variouslycodebreakersandlinguists,togetherwiththe firstofwhatbecamesuccessivewavesofyoungwomen,whowouldplayavitalroleintheoperations of‘BP’.ThefirsttwooftheseweredaughtersofgolfingpartnersofDenniston,reflectingthe importanceofpersonalconnectionsinBletchley’srecruitmentprocessintheearlydays,before industrialisationbecameinescapable.Indeed,thewholewartimeintelligencemachineemphasisedthe cosinessoftheupperreachesofBritishlife.OxfordUniversityPresswasentrustedwith responsibilityforprintingvastquantitiesofcodes,mapsandreports,becauseofitspre-war experienceproducingexaminationpapersundersecureconditions.TheAdmiralty’sliaisonwithOUP washandledbyMargaretGodfrey,wifeofthedirectorofnavalintelligence.TheRoyalNavy’s TopographicalPhotographicLibrarywashousedinthebasementofthenearbyBodleianLibrary, whicheventuallydispatched300,000imagesamonthtooperationalareas.TheWorldWarI intelligenceveteranAdmiralSirWilliam‘Blinker ’HallintroducedGodfrey,hismodernsuccessor, totheCityofLondonbankinggiantsMontaguNorman,OlafHambroandtheRothschilds,who helpedtoidentifysuitablerecruitsfortheNID. CandidatesbeingscrutinisedforBletchleywereoftenasked:‘Doyouhavereligiousscruplesabout readingotherpeople’scorrespondence?’Twenty-year-oldHarryHinsleywasinterviewedatStJohn’s College,CambridgebyAlastairDennistonandCol.JohnTiltman,theseniorcodebreaker.Theysaid: ‘You’vetravelledabit,weunderstand.You’vedonequitewellinyourTripos.Whatdoyouthinkof governmentservice?Wouldyouratherhavethatthanbeconscripted?’Hinsleywouldindeed,and joinedtheNavalSectionlocatedinBletchley’sHut4.Throughtheicywinterof1939–40,suchmen andwomenwrestledwithEnigmatraffic.Workingconditionsweredismal,withstaffmuffledin overcoatsandmittens.ThefirstbreakintoaLuftwaffeEnigmakey–designated‘Green’–isthought tohavebeenmadeon25October1939.InDecember,byunaidedintellectualeffortAlanTuringis believedtohavebrokenfivedays’worthofoldnavalmessages.BytheendofMarch,theFrench–or rather,thePolesworkingatFrance’sStationBruno–hadbrokentwentydays’worthofoldsignals andBPaboutthirty,allLuftwaffetraffic. Turingwasmuchmoreimportantlyengaged.Hecompileda150-pagetreatiseonEnigma,studded withschoolboyishblots,deletionsandillegibilities.Whilemostcodebreakersaddressedeachother byfirstnamesornicknames,heedlessofageandstatus,almosteveryoneknewTuringas‘Prof’ ratherthanasAlan.WhenhisEnigmastudywascirculatedlaterin1940,itbecameknownas‘the Prof’sbook’.Healsosetaboutfulfillinghisconceptfora‘bombe’,aprimitivebutrevolutionary electro-mechanicaldeviceforexploringmultiplemathematicalcombinations.Thisborrowedits name,thoughnotitsdesign,fromthePolish‘bomby’,andwouldbecapableofexaminingthe17,576 possiblewheeldeploymentsforathree-rotorEnigmainabouttwentyminutes:theorderforthefirst machinewasplacedinOctober1939,andtheprototypebecameoperationalsixmonthslater. Meanwhile,outsideinthepark,workmensawedandhammeredatanever-wideningarrayoflow woodenbuildingswhichhousedthegrowingstaff.Eventually,onlyadministratorsworkedinthe mainbuilding,wherethetelephoneswitchboardwasestablishedintheballroom.Inthehuts,signals wereshiftedfromonesectiontoanotheronasmalltrolleypushedalongamakeshiftwoodentunnel. Hut8attackedGermannavaltraffic,whichwasthenpassedtoHut4fortranslationandprocessing. Hut3performedthesamefunctionforWehrmachtandLuftwaffetrafficdecryptedbyHut6.The formerwouldeventuallyplayapivotalroleinAlliedwartimeintelligence,butinitsearlyincarnation ithadastaffofjustfour.FrankLucas,whowasoneofthem,wrote:‘OnasnowyJanuarymorningof 1940,inasmallbleakwoodenroomwithnothingbutatableandthreechairs,thefirstbundleof Enigmadecodesappeared.[We]hadnoideawhattheywereabouttodisclose.’Afewscoreyards away,Hut6runbyGordonWelchmanwrestledwitharmy-Luftwaffe‘Red’keytraffic,whichwasthe firsttobebrokeninbulk. Fromtheoutset,painsweretakentodisguisefromallbutthemostsenioroperationalcommanders thefactthatinformationwasbeinggainedfromcodebreaking.Thisgaveanunintendedboosttothe prestigeofMI6,andtothatofStewartMenziesinparticular.WhenRegJonesgaveadisguisedreport basedonanUltradecrypttotheRAF’sdirectorofsignals,AirCommodoreNutting,theairman professedastonishedadmirationforthecourageofthepresumedspieswhohadprovidedthe information,saying,‘ByJove,you’vegotsomebravechapsworkingforyou!’Theever-growing scaleoftheenemytraffictobetrawledwasintimidating.Itisameasureoftheexpansionof communicationsasabranchofwarfarethatbyAugust1943,305,000personnelamongthe Luftwaffe’stotalstrengthof2.3millionwereemployedonsignalsduties–transmitting,receivingor processing–andthesamewastrueonbothsidesofthewar,andofallarmedforces. AtGC&CStherewereinevitablepersonalityclashes.GordonWelchman,whosecreative contributionbecamesecondonlytothatofTuring,andwhoseorganisationalskillswerealso priceless,foundithardtoworkwiththehighly-strungandfractiousDillwynKnox,acontenderfor thehotlycontestedtitleofBletchley’sstareccentric.Anotoriouslyawfuldriver,Knoxgiggled:‘It’s amazinghowpeoplesmile,andapologisetoyou,whenyouknockthemover.’Hesustainedastream ofintemperatecomplaintsanddemandstoDenniston,hisoldcomradefromRoom40,aboutstaff shortages,workingconditions,lowpay,togetherwiththeintrusionofandexcessiveauthority concededtonon-cryptanalysts:serviceintelligenceofficers‘whomaulandconcealourresults’. KnoxwasseriouslyillwiththecancerthatwouldkillhiminFebruary1943,butmeanwhileheand Welchmanbickered:theoldermanaccusedtheyoungerofexceedinghisnarrowinitialbrief,andwas alsoimpatientofTuring,writing,‘Heisverydifficulttoanchordown.Heisverycleverbutquite irresponsibleandthrowsoutamassofsuggestionsofalldegreesofmerit.Ihavejust,butonlyjust, enoughauthorityandabilitytokeephimandhisideasinsomesortoforderanddiscipline.Butheis veryniceaboutitall.’TuringpromptedmirthbyjoiningBletchley’sHomeGuardbecausehewas seizedbyanimpulsetolearntoshoot,thenprovokedtheapoplecticrageofitscolonelbyabsenting himselffromparadesoncehehadfulfilledthisprivatepurpose.Hisunworldlinesscouldprovoke realexasperationamongthoseunderrelentlesspressuretoproduceresults.Acolleaguespokeof Turing’s‘almosttotalinabilitytomakehimselfunderstood’. Therewereplentyofminortantrumslowerdownthehierarchy,unsurprisingwhenstaffwere performingstressfultasksthroughlonghoursinbleakworkingconditions.AngusWilson,thelater novelist,onceventedsuchastormofragethatacolleaguesaidwearily,‘Dostopit,Angus,otherwise we’llputyouinthelake!’Wilsonretorteddefiantly,‘Don’tworry,I’lldoitmyself,’anddulyplunged intothewaterinfrontofthehouse;onanothersuchoccasionhehurledabottleofinkataWren. Manywartimecodebreakerssufferedtemporaryorpermanentphysicalormentalcollapses,brought onbytheirwork:WilliamFriedman,oneofAmerica’spioneerpractitioners,underwentanervous breakdowninJanuary1941whichincapacitatedhimforthreemonths.HughTrevor-Roper languishedforseveralmonthsataboutthesametime,andothersregularlysuccumbed. Germansignalswereatfirstinterceptedbyabatteryofarmywireless-operatorsstationedinanold navalfortatChatham,arolelaterassumedbyGambier-Parry’sorganisationatWhaddonHall.Inthe earlywaryearstherewereneverenoughoperators,andboththeRAFandthearmywerereluctantto acknowledgethepriorityofmeetingGC&CS’sdemands.Signalswerebroughtinbatchesto Bletchley’sguardroombymotorcyclecouriers,atallhoursandoftenindreadfulweather,then distributedbetweentherelevanthuts.Fromanearlystage,thecodebreakerslearnedtoidentify Germansendersbytheunencryptedpreambletotheirmessagetexts,noneofwhichwaslongerthan 250words.Itwasthenamatterofsittinghunchedoveradealtablethroughthehoursofashift, ponderingajumbleofnumbersandlettersfromwhichonlymen–andBletchley’shandfulofwomen –withremarkablelogicalormathematicalpowersmighthopetoextractfragmentsofmeaning.‘The idealcryptanalyst,’StephenBudianskyhaswritten,‘wasBeethovenwiththesoulofanaccountant.’ WhenChristopherMorriswasanewrecruittoBletchleyheheardoneofhisseniorcolleagues,asked therequirementsforthejob,respondlaconically,‘Oh,Isupposeasharppencilandapieceofsquared paper.’Morrishimselfthoughtthatthemainrequisites–exceptattheexaltedlevelofKnox,Turing, WelchmanandlaterMaxNewman–were‘patience,accuracy,stamina,areasonablyclearhead,some experienceandanabilitytoworkwithothers’. Theyopenedwhatbecamevastcardindexes,stackedinshoeboxesalongthesidesofthehuts, cataloguingenemyunits,personnel,codenames,locations,abbreviationsandmilitaryhardware; differentEnigmakeysweredistinguishedbycolour–forinstance,yellow,green,redandblue, respectivelyindicatingNorway,Wehrmacht,army-Luftwaffeandairtrainingcodes.‘Whenanew wordcameupinthemessageyouweretranslating,’wroteHughSkillen,‘anewtypeofjetfuel,or machinepart–youlookedforit,andifitwasnotthere,theindexerputitinwithareferencetimeand datestamp.’Bletchley’smeticulousrecord-keepingbecameacriticalelementinitstriumphs. Forsecurityreasons,thePark’soperationswererigidlycompartmentalised,andtherewaslittle exchangeofinformationorgossipbetweensections.EvenWelchmanremarkedyearslaterhowlittle heknewaboutwhatcolleaguesweredoingafewyardsawayfromhisownHut.Asthestaffgrew fromhundredsintothousands,facilitieslaggedbehind:asectionheadcomplainedthattwohundred menandwomenenjoyedtheuseofjustonelavatory.ThefoodintheBletchleycanteenwaspooreven bywartimestandards.FormerdebutanteSarahNortononenightfoundacookedcockroachinher meat:‘IwasabouttoreturnittothecateringmanageresswhenmyfriendOsla,whohadtheappetite ofalionesswithcubs,snatchedtheplateandsaid:“Whatawaste–I’lleatit!”’Thenearestavailable delicaciesoutsidethewireweretobefoundattheStationInninBletchleytown,whichofferedox heart.Welchmanrecalledhavingtoprovidehisownnewspapertowrapfishandchipsatthelocal shop.Thecodebreakersworkedaroundtheclockinthreerotatingshifts,startingwith8a.m.to4p.m. Whentheexhaustedmenandwomencycledortookabusthroughtheblackouttotheirlodgings,they foundfewcomforts:dimlighting,hotbathsoftenrationedtooneaweek,draconianrulesaboutintersexvisiting. ItisdeeplyimpressivethatthosewhoworkedatBletchleysustainedsuchdedicationwhileworking dayafterday,monthaftermonth,inadrabworlddevoidofglamour,excitement,variety,gloryand decorations.InHut3,thewatchsataroundahorseshoetable,translatingdecipheredsignals,eachone resemblingatelegraphflimsy,forwardedfromHut6.Ideally,decryptswerecomposedofcomplete Germanwords,butoftentherewereinterruptionsandcorruptionsinthetexts,whichdemandedleaps ofimaginationfromthelinguists.WilliamMillwardrecalledwithshameanightwhenheinventeda placenamed‘Senke’,nearQataraintheNorthAfricandesert–havingforgottenthatSenkewasthe Germanwordforageographicaldepression.Schoolmastersprovedidealaswatchchiefs,wrote PeterCalvocoressi,becausetheywerenaturallymeticulous:‘Ifnotsatisfied,theywouldthrowbacka translationatevenaneminentprofessor.ItremindedmeofChiefExaminersat“A”Levelwhowould sendbackscriptstoanAssistantExaminertore-mark.’NoonecouldworkatGC&CSwhodidnot lovebraingames.Thereweredreary,idleyetsleeplesslulls,whennotrafficarrivedforthewatches toworkon.PeterHiltononceusedsuchadoodletimetocomposeapalindrome:‘DOCNOTE,I DISSENT,AFASTNEVERPREVENTSAFATNESS.IDIETONCOD’. AlthoughAlanTuringwasacknowledgedasthehighestintellectatBletchley,itsachievementwas supremelyateameffort;thecreativeinputofsomeothers,Welchmanprominentamongthem,was almostasimportantasthatofTuring.OnenightinFebruary1940,severalmonthsbeforethearrival ofthefirstbombe,twenty-one-year-oldCambridgemathematicianJohnHerivelwassmokingapipe beforethefireinhisbillet,andconcentratingfuriouslyonencodedmessagesevenashedriftedin andoutofadoze.Aninspirationstruckhimashegazedwiththemind’seyeataGermanEnigma operator.Heperceivedsuchamanstartinghismorning’sworkboredorwearyorhungover,andthus nottroublingtochangethepreviousday’sringsettingonhismachinebeforestartingtocipher messages.Herivelscarcelysleptthatnight,ashewentontodeducehowsuchanactofcarelessness mightbedetected,thenexploitedtobreakamessage. Welchman,whohadsupervisedhimatCambridge,immediatelysawtheimportanceofthisflashof insight,amarriageofmathematicalbrilliancetoagraspofhumanweakness.Hetoldtheyoungman ferventlythathe‘wouldnotbeforgotten’,andindeedhisinspirationbecameknownas‘theHerivel tip’.DillwynKnoxhadalreadyidentifiedanotherentrypointtomessages,rootedinoperatorerrors andtextsettings–whatthecodebreakerschristened‘Cillis’or‘Sillies’.Welchmanwrotelaterthat Bletchleyremained‘entirelydependentonHeriveltipsandCillisfromtheinvasionofFrancetothe endoftheBattleofBritain’.Inotherwords,untilthearrivalofthebombes,codebreakingwasbeing donebyrawbrainpower,withoutsignificantmechanicalassistance:atthisearlystage,theBritish laggedbehindtheirAmericancounterpartsinexploitingtechnology–boththeUSArmyandUS NavycodebreakingteamsusedHollerithpunched-cardsorters,ofakindthatonlybegantoappearat BletchleyinMay1940,becausechiefcodebreakerCol.JohnTiltmanhadbeenscepticalaboutthem. Ultraprovidednoimportantmaterialduringthesummerof1940,butseveralindicationsaboutthe postponementof‘Sealion’,theNaziinvasionofBritain,notableamongthemaSeptemberLuftwaffe messageorderingthedismantlingofairtransportequipmentatDutchairfields. FredWinterbotham,theMI6officerwhoeventuallybecameoverseerofthe‘SpecialLiaisonUnit’ networkwhichfedUltradecryptstocommandersinthefield,describedthefirstbombe–christened ‘Agnus’,corruptedto‘Agnes’–asresembling‘someEasterngoddesswhowasdestinedtobecome theoracleofBletchley’.ItwasinstalledinHut11on14March1940,butsufferedsubstantialteething troubles.GordonWelchmanmadeanimportantcontributiontoTuring’screationbydevisinga ‘diagonalboard’,anelementintroducedintothefirstreallyeffectivemodel,whichcameintoservice inmid-August.Agnesanditsmanysuccessorswerenotcomputers,becausetheyhadnomemory. Theywereinsteadelectro-mechanicalkey-findingaids,sixandahalffeethighandsevenwide, mountedinbronze-colouredcabinets,andcontainingthirty-sixbanksofhigh-speedelectricallydrivenEnigmareplicas.Eachbombecontainedelevenmilesofwiringandamillionsoldered contacts.BuiltbytheBritishTabulatingMachineCompanyatLetchworth,theydependedpartlyon componentsassembledinscoresoflocalvillagehalls,bycasualworkerswhohadnoclueofthe importancetothewareffortofthetwenty-six-waycablesandothersmallelectricalpartsthey contributed. Withtheassistanceofaclueor‘crib’–avitalidentifyinglink,usuallyacodebreaker ’sguessabout thenatureofpartofagivensignal–abombecouldtestmillionsofmathematicalpossibilitiesforthe settingsofthreeEnigmarotors.Figuratively,Agnesandherkinwerebloodhoundsneedingaslipper orhandkerchieftotakeupascent.Iftherewasno‘crib’,thebombecouldnotsolvethekey–but mercifullyoften,therewasone.Subsequentmachines,miraclesofreliabilitygiventheircontinuous operation,weregiventheirownnamesbytheWrenswhomannedthemaroundtheclock,usually thoseofwarships–Warspite,Victoryandsuchlike.Thebombesdidnottakeinenemycipher messagesanddisgorgetheminfluentGerman.Theywereinsteadpricelessaccelerators,oncethe codebreakerssecuredaninsightintothenatureofagivensignalortrafficstream.Alsousefulwasa batteryofBritishType-Xciphermachines,modifiedtomatchthebehaviourofEnigmas,onwhich Wrenoperatorstestedspeculativemessagesolutions.Oneoftheprincipalconstraintson codebreaking,especiallybetween1940and1942,wasthataccesstothescarcetechnologyhadtobe apportionedbetweencompetingclaimantsofthethreeservices,andtherewasneverenough‘bombe time’togoaround. Throughout1940,humanbrainpowerremainedthedominantelementinBletchley’ssuccesses, whichincreasedwitheverypassingweek.Itwas‘theHeriveltip’,notbombes,thatenabledtheteamto crackthearmy-Luftwaffe‘Red’keyinMay.Theoverwhelmingbulkofenemytrafficreadthrough therestoftheyear–aroundathousandmessagesaday–wasthatoftheLuftwaffe,anduntiltheend ofthewarairforcematerialwasaccessedmoreswiftlythanthatoftheotherservices.Animportant requirementforsuccesswaswhatthecodebreakerscalled‘depth’–possessionofsufficientmessages inagivenkeytogivethemplayingspaceforcalculationsandspeculations. LuftwaffesignalsprovidedmanycluestotheWehrmacht’sparallelactivities,butintheearlydays interpretationwasimpededbylackofunderstandingofGermanterminologyandabbreviations.In September1940,BletchleybrokesometrafficfromGöring’spathfinderunit,KGr100,whichenabled ittoforecastthetargetsofseveralbomberraids.Butwarningwasoflittlepracticalusefulnesstothe defenderswhenhardpower,intheformofradar-guidedRAFnight-fighters,waslackinginboth numbersandeffectiveness. Asmorebombeswerebuilt–by1945therewere211ofthem–theyweredispersedaroundthe LondonsuburbsasaprecautionagainstanenemyairattackonBletchley.Theoperators,chiefly youngwomenoftheWRNS,foundlonghoursbesidethehot,smelly,clatteringmachines extraordinarilygruelling,especiallywhentheywereobligedtousetweezerstoadjustthedelicate electricalwiring.Somegirlswereunnervedbythemonotonousracket.Oneofthemsaid:‘Itwaslike alotofknittingmachinesworking–akindoftickety-clicketynoise.’Theywenthomewiththeirshirt cuffsblackenedbyafinesprayofoilfromthebombes’revolvingdrums. NavalEnigmaremainedformanymonthsimpenetrable.Thiswaspartlybecauseitssystemofeight rotors,ofwhichthreewereusedatanyonetime,posedgreaterdifficultiesthanthearmy’sfive,and partlyalsobecausetheKriegsmarine’soperatorsweremoredisciplinedthantheirLuftwaffe counterparts,andcommittedfewererrorstoprovideopeningsforBletchley.Therewasabriefspasm ofsuccessinlateApril1940,whenfivedays’trafficwasread,butthereaftermorethanayearelapsed –aneternityinthemindsofthosewhowrestledvainlywiththeproblemdayafterday,weekupon week–beforethebigbreakthrough.DennistonsaidgloomilytoFrankBirch,a1918veteranof Room40whonowheadedthenavalsection:‘Youknow,theGermansdon’tmeanyoutoreadtheir stuff,andIdon’tsupposeyoueverwill.’AlanTuringhimselfhadbeendallyingwiththe Kriegsmarine’strafficalmostsincehisarrivalatBletchley.Acolleague,HughAlexander,observed thathebecameengagedbecausenobodyelseseemedtobemakingheadway,andinhisremote fashionhewasfascinatedbytheabstractchallenge. ItwasTuringwhodevisedanewmethodchristened‘Banburismus’,employinglongpunchedpaper sheetsmanufacturedinthetownofBanbury,whichassistedthefirstimportantbreaksinto KriegsmarinemessagesbyreducingthenumberofpossibleEnigmarotororderstobetestedfrom 336toaroundeighteen.Thissystemwasintroducedinthespringof1941,justasBritishlossestoUboatsbegantobecomealarming.Onland,theBritishinthosedayslackedpowerandopportunityto domuchwithsuchknowledgeoftheWehrmacht’smovementsastheysecured,andtherewasalarge elementofluckaboutwhatmessageswerebroken.InNorthAfricainearly1941,theBritishArmy profitedfromsomegoodsigintderivedfromeavesdroppingontheItalians,butfewEnigma messageswerebrokenquicklyenoughtoassistdecision-makingonthebattlefield.Atsea,by contrast,therewasanearlygoldenprizeforGC&CS’slabours. Theimpetustowardssuccesswasprovidedbyaseriesofcapturesfaroutontheocean,which dramaticallyincreasedBletchley’sknowledgeoftheenemy’snavalcommunications.On23February 1941,BritishcommandosraidingtheLofotenIslandsseizedtheGermanarmedtrawlerKrebs,from whichsparerotorsforanavalEnigmawererecovered,thoughthemachineitselfhadbeenthrown overboard.This‘pinch’promptedtheRoyalNavytolaunchanoperationexplicitlydesignedto capturemoreEnigmamaterial,targetingGermanweather-reportingtrawlersbetweenIcelandandJan MayenIsland.On7May,asweepbythreecruiserslocatedandseizedtheMünchen–buttoolateto saveitsEnigmaandassociatedcodingdatafromtheArcticdeep.On25Junethenavycaughtitssister vesseltheLauenburg,againminusitsEnigma,butwithausefulhaulofciphermaterial. Hut8nowhadenoughinformationtoreadsomeU-boatsignals,buttheseizurewhichopenedthe traffictofluentdecryptionwasthefruitofchanceandhighcourage,ratherthanofdesign.On9May 1941aconvoyescortgroupattackedandforcedtothesurfaceJuliusLempe’sU-110.Aboarding partyfromHMSBulldogcommandedbySub-LieutenantDavidBalmesecuredthesubmarine, preventeditssinking,andbroughtbacktohisdestroyerpearlsbeyondprice:documentationfor currentEnigma.ThoughU-110latersankundertow–fortunatelyso,fromasecurityviewpoint–the shortsignalbook,officercipheringinstructionsandothermaterialreachedBletchleysafely,andthe secretofthesubmarine’scapturewaspreservedbeyondthewar ’send.AnEnigmamachinewasalso recovered,butperverselythiswastheleastusefulelementofthebooty,becauseBletchleyhadone already,togetherwithassortedrotorsseizedinother‘pinches’.Withindays,Hut8wasreadinga steadystreamofGermannavalmessages.RalphErskine,oneoftheforemostexpertson codebreakingatBletchley,believesthattheParkwasalreadyclosetoreadingtheKriegsmarine traffic,evenwithouttheU-110haul.Whatisforcertain,however,isthatitwasimpossibletobreak theU-boatcipherswithouttheassistanceofcapturedmaterial,whichwouldagainbecomeavital issuelaterinthewar. ThebreakthroughintotheKriegsmarinecipherscamejusttoolatetoinfluencethepursuitofthe BismarckinthelatterdaysofMay1941.Conventionaldirection-findingonthebehemoth’swireless transmissions,supportedbyairreconnaissance,werethekeyfactorsinenablingtheRoyalNavyto interceptandsinkitonthemorningofthe27th,thoughassistedinthelaststagebydecryptionofa LuftwaffesignalrevealingBrestasBismarck’sdestination.Thereafter,Bletchleyproducedasteady streamofmessagesthatrevealedU-boatpositionsandintendedcourses.Theso-calledHydracipher waslaidbare,andotherkeyswereprogressivelybroken:themoretheParkknew,themoreitwas abletodiscover.Theflowofdecryptswasneverassured,however,anddisturbingdelayssometimes tookplace.‘Huff-Duff’–High-FrequencyDirection-Finding–playedanimportantsecondaryrolein thelocationofU-boats.TheoutcomewasarelentlessshiftinthebalanceofadvantageintheBattleof theAtlanticthrough1941andinto1942.Herewasacasewhereintelligenceindisputablyand importantlyinfluencedevents. BletchleywasalsoreadingasignificantportionofItaliannavaltraffic.On25March1941,oneof thesmallnumberofwomendecrypters,nineteen-year-oldmathematicianMavisLeverinDillwyn Knox’steam–hewasfamouslysupportiveoftalentedgirlsinamale-dominatedinstitution–playeda criticalroleinbreakingamessagewhichrevealedthattheItalianfleetwouldshortlyputtoseato attackBritishconvoys.ThewarningenabledtheMediterraneanC-in-CAdmiralSirAndrew CunninghamtocontriveanencounteroffCapeMatapanduringtheafternoonandnightof28March whichendedinastrikingvictoryfortheRoyalNavy.Bydawnonthe29th,threecruisersandtwo destroyershadbeensunk,whilethebattleshipVittorioVenetowasdamaged,anoutcomethatdeterred theItaliansurfacefleetfrommakinganyfurtherattempttointerdictBritishtroopmovementsto Greece. SpringbroughtanincreasingflowofdecryptsaboutWehrmachtoperationsintheEastern Mediterranean.SeniorofficersstrovetostreamlinethetransferofinformationfromBletchleyto battlefields,sothatmaterialreachedcommandersinrealtime.Oneofthemostsignificantintercepts, detailingGermanplansfortheMay1941invasionofCrete,reported‘probabledateofending preparations:17/5.Proposedcourseofoperation…Sharpattackagainstenemyairforce,military campsandA/Apositions…TroopsofFliegerkorpsXI:parachutelandingtooccupyMaleme,Candia andRetiomo;transferofdive-bombersandfighterstoMalemeandCandia;air-landingoperationsby remainderofFliegerkorpsXI;sea-transportofflakunits,furtherarmyelementsandsupplies.’ Churchillpersonallyannotatedtheflimsy:‘InviewofthegtimportanceofthisIshdliketheactual texttransmittedbyMOSTSECRETtogetherwithwarningsaboutabsolutesecrecy.’Thisinformation waspassedtoWavellandFreyberg,therelevantcommanders,at2340on6May.Thelossofthe subsequentBattleofCrete,followingtheGermaninvasionwhichbeganonthemorningofthe20th, emphasisedafundamentalrealityaboutEnigmadecrypts:theycouldchangeoutcomesonlywhen Britishcommandersandtroopsonthegroundweresufficientlystrong,competentandcourageous effectivelytoexploitthem.StuartMilner-BarryofHut6saidthatheandhiscolleagueslookedback onCreteas‘thegreatestdisappointmentofthewar.Itseemedanearcertaintythat,with…everydetail oftheoperationspeltoutforusinadvance…theattackwouldbeignominiouslythrownback.’ TheCretansignal,informingBritishgeneralsofGermanintentionsintimetorespond,wasan exceptionratherthanacommonplacein1941.Bletchleywasabletoprovideanever-growingflowof informationaboutthedeploymentsoftheenemy,notleastinEasternEurope,mostofitderivedfrom Luftwaffeandarmy-Luftwaffedecrypts.Wehrmachttrafficstubbornlyresistedpenetration,but Germanrailwaycodesprovidedinformationabout–forinstance–troopmovementstoYugoslavia, GreeceandEasternEuropeinthesummerof1941.Hitler ’sloominginvasionoftheSovietUnion,the toweringeventofthewar,wasalsothefirstgreatstrategicdevelopmentforwhichUltraintelligence providedexplicitwarning.WhileBritainhadnopowertoinfluenceorimpedeHitler ’sOperation ‘Barbarossa’,itwasclearlyofthehighestimportancetoChurchillandhisgeneralstobeableto monitoritsunfolding. ItbecameasourceofincreasingfrustrationtotheprimeministerthatBritishtroopsinNorth AfricafailedtofrustrateordefeatRommelwhentheyhadnotonlysuperiorityinmen,tanksand guns,butalsoanever-growingstreamofinformationaboutGermandeploymentsandmovements, forinstanceatHalfayaPassinMay.ChurchillporedintentlyoverhisowndailyfileofUltramaterial. WhenhereadadecryptreportingpetrolstocksatvariousLuftwaffeairfieldsinLibya,hescrawled onitinhisredink:‘CAS[ChiefofAirStaff]Howmanyhoursflyingcantheira/cdoonthis–about? WSC.’AirChiefMarshalSirCharlesPortalrespondedtestily:‘Unfortunatelyitisnotpossibleto makeanygeneraldeductionsincethefiguresonlyrelatetothestockatBenghazi.Wedonotpossess completefiguresforthesupplyandconsumptionofoilandpetrolthroughoutLibya.Allweknowis thatthereareindicationsofanoverallshortagewhichislimitingoperationsintheforwardarea.’ Thisproblemwasendemicwhendecryptswerefragmentary.StewartMenziesperformedan importantservicebydissuadingtheprimeministerfromfulfillinghisfrequentdesiretodispatchraw Ultradirecttocommanders-in-chiefinthefield,ashehaddoneinthecaseofCrete.‘C’wassurely correct,onsecuritygrounds,andalsobecausedecryptsthatlackedthecontextofotherintelligence couldbehighlymisleadingtountrainedeyes. Onland,in1941Bletchleyprovidedmoreguidancetostrategythantotactics:itgaveChurchill’s highcommandanauthoritative,thoughnevercomprehensive,pictureofGermandeploymentsin everytheatreofwar.UltracoulddolittletoassisttheRAF’songoingstrugglewiththeLuftwaffefor masteryoftheskies.OnlytheRoyalNavygainedimmediateadvantage,bothintheMediterraneanand theAtlantic.Nothingalteredthefactthat,untiltheworldwidebalanceofstrengthbegantoshiftinthe Allies’favourinthelatterpartof1942,theoperationalsuperiorityofGermanandJapaneseforces enabledthemtokeepwinningvictories.Bletchleywasanincreasinglyimportantweapon,butitwas notamagicsword. ThepracticesanddisciplinesofGC&CSevolvedprogressively,withmanywranglesandturfwars alongtheway.DeputydirectorNigeldeGreycomplainedaboutthe‘verylowstandardsofmilitary behaviour ’prevailinginwhatwassupposedtobeamilitaryestablishment.Buthowcoulditbe otherwise?NoelAnnanwrote:‘ManyofthecryptanalystswhoproducedUltrawereagnostic, heterodoxdonswhodidnotsetmuchstorebythenormalinterpretationsofpatriotismand democracy.’Itwasnoteasytocombinethedisciplineessentialtotheoperation’ssmoothfunctioning withsensitivitytothewaywardandfranklyeccentriccharacterofsomeofitsresidentgeniuses.Col. Tiltmanwroteruefullyon2March1941:‘Cryptanalystshavetobehandleddelicatelyanddonottake kindlytoservicemethodsofcontrol,whichareessentialtothegoodworkingofsignals.’Whenthe directoroftheRoyalNavy’swomenpersonnelvisitedthePark,shedemandedindignantly:‘Whyare myWrensworkingwithcivilians?’WAAFsintheteleprinterroomexpressedresentmentabouttaking ordersfromcivilians.InDecember1940theWarOffice’sdirectorofmilitaryintelligencestageda grabforBletchley’smilitaryoutput.Until1941,theAdmiraltytriedtocontinuesomecryptographic workunderitsownroof.InHut3,rowseruptedbetweenrepresentativesofthethreearmedservices. StewartMenziesreceivedaconstantstreamofcomplaintsfromrivalinterests,whileBletchleystaff referredtoBroadwaywithoutenthusiasmas‘theotherside’.Oneofthemostdurablecriticismsof ‘C’isthathewasevereagertoacceptcreditfortheachievementsofthePark,whiledecliningto engagewithitschronicresourceproblems,whicheventuallypromptedtheOctober1941letterto ChurchillsignedbyTuringandhiscolleaguespleadingformorestaff,thatcausedChurchilltosend hisfamous‘ActionThisDay’message:‘Makesuretheyhavealltheywantonextremepriority.’Itisa seriouschargeagainstMenzies,thathewasanabsenteelandlordofGC&CS. Yetallthismademercifullylittleimpactontheworkofthecodebreakers.EdwardThomas,anaval officerwhoworkedatthePark,wasimpressedbytheabsenceofhierarchicaldistinctions:‘Despite thehightensionofmuchofthework…anyoneofwhateverrankordegreecouldapproachanyone else,howevervenerable,withanyideaorsuggestion,howevercrazy.’Fewpeopleofanyrankor statusfeltdeniedavoice–anunusuallyrareandprivilegedstateofaffairsinthewartimeinstitutions ofanynation.From1941,theCambridgescientistandnovelistC.P.SnowbecameakeyWhitehall intermediary,responsibleforchannellingsuitablemathematiciansandotherscholarstoBletchley. GC&CSalsoemployedthousandsofhumblerfolk,recruitedchieflyfortheirlanguageskills.Itsfiles recorddetailsofsomeRAFpersonnelinterviewed,suchasLeadingAircraftsmanBerry,agedtwentythree,whohadstartedtrainingasapilotbutre-musteredowingtohisconscientiousobjectionsto droppingbombs.HisGermanlanguageskillsweregradedonly‘B’,andtherecruitersnoted:‘if interestedinworkmightdowell,butneedscarefulhandling’. LACGraywasalsoex-aircrew,‘groundedasresultofcrash’,had‘B’gradeSpanish.CplHodges, agedtwenty-six,wasunfitforaircrew,‘anxioustousehisGerman“A”,incivillifeworkedin architect’soffice’.AC1Tew,atwenty-eight-year-oldclerk,hadGerman‘A’,aswellassomeSpanish, FrenchandDanish,acquiredwhileworkinginhisfather ’sleather-tradingbusiness.Therewasmuch snappingbetweenBletchleyandtheAirMinistryaboutthelatter ’sreluctancetograntcommissioned ranktoRAFmensecondedtocipherorwirelessinterceptionduties.Group-CaptainBlandyoftheY Servicecomplainedthatsuchpeoplewere‘pickedindividualshavingconsiderablelinguistic qualificationsandahighstandardofeducation…[MereAircraftsmen]andNCOslackthenecessary authorityrequiredtocarryouttheirdutiesefficiently.’ NotallthepersonnelpostedtoBletchleyprovedsuitedtoitsdemands.AMarch1941reportonan RAFofficerreturnedtogeneraldutiesafteraspellatBPnoted:‘Althoughanexcellentlinguist,he doesnotappeartometohaveanyaptitudeorinclinationfortheresearchsideofthework.Hehad beenrelegatedtoclericaltasks,butdidnotseemthustojustifyhispay.’Therewereequallybleak verdictsontheperformanceofsomewomenstafferslowerdownthehierarchy:‘WrenKenwickis inaccurate,veryslowandnotabitkeenonherwork,notveryintelligent.WrensBuchananandFord areunintelligentandslowandseemunabletolearn.WrenRogerssuffersfrommildclaustrophobia andcannotworkinawindowlessroom.’Thereportconcluded:‘Theremainder…aredoingmost excellentwork,’buttheselectorswereurgedtorecognisetheimportanceofthejobsthewomenwere requiredtofulfil,‘andnottosendustoomanyoftheCookandMessengertype’. Enfoldedwithintheiroppressivesecurityblanket,Bletchley’speoplelived,lovedandlargely playedwithintheirowncommunity.Almostallwerepaidapittance:nineteen-year-oldmathematician MavisLever,oneof‘Dilly’Knox’steam,initiallyreceivedthirtyshillingsaweek,ofwhichshepaid twenty-oneshillingsforherlodgings.Whenstaffdidescapeintotheworldbeyondtheperimeter fence,thecivilianstatusoftheyoungmenincurreddarksuspicionsamongtheuninitiatedabouttheir absencefromanybattlefield.ThedramasandpantomimesperformedbythePark’samateurdramatic societybecamehighspotsintheannualcalendar:FrankBirch,formerlyofKing’sCollege, CambridgeandnowheadofHut4,wascelebratedforhisappearancesastheWidowTwankeyin productionsofthepantomimeAladdin. By1942,commonsensehadachievedsomeimportantsuccessesinthePark’smanagement.Each sectionworkedtoitsappointedhead,irrespectiveofrankorlackofit.CryptanalysisforallBritain’s armedforceswashandledentirelyatBletchleyanditsIndianout-stations,aconcentrationofeffort thatneitherGermanynortheUnitedStatesevermatched.GordonWelchmanemergedastheforemost lubricator,curbingfeuding;severalnotoriouslystupidserviceofficersweretransferredout;the popularEricJoneswasappointedtoheadHut3.Itwasacknowledgedthattheciviliancodebreakers mustberiddenonthelightestpossiblerein,thoughthedirectorwaspronetooccasionalsurgesof authoritarianism. On1February1942,AdmiralKarlDönitzintroducedareflectororfourthrotorintotheAtlantic U-boatservice’sEnigma,withimmediateandcalamitousresultsforAlliedfortunesintheBattleof theAtlantic:thisimposedatwenty-six-foldincreaseintherangeofpossiblesettings,andblinded Bletchley.Sinkingssoared.Atsea,theRoyalNavywasobligedtorelyupon‘Huff-Duff’tolocate enemysubmarinesuntiltheseapproachedwithinrangeofunderwaterdetectionbytheAsdicsof convoyescorts,whichwereimpotentagainstnightsurfaceattackers.Breakingwhatwasnow designatedthe‘Shark’submarinekeybecamethePark’sforemostpriority,achallengeunresolved forninefrighteningmonths,byfarthemoststressfulperiodofthewarforthoseengagedinthetask. Theyknew,astheysathunchedovertheirlaboursinthoseausterehuts,thatatseamenweredying everydaybecauseoftheirfailure–thoughnorationalpersonwouldhavecalleditsuch. Alsoon1February,coincidentally,AlastairDennistonwaspushedasideintoasubordinateLondon role,tobereplacedbyhisdeputy,EdwardTravis.Insomemeasurethisdevelopmentreflectedaclash ofpersonalities–DennistonandStewartMenziesdislikedeachother–togetherwiththeinfighting characteristicofanylargebureaucracy.ButitwaswidelyfeltatBletchleythatitsoperationalhead wasbeingoverwhelmedbythestrainsofrunninganestablishmentthatsincetheoutbreakofwarhad increasedfourfoldinsize,andmanytimesthatmuchinitsimportancetothewareffort.Power struggleswereunavoidable.Dennistonwasagoodandkindmanwhohaddonemanythingswell,but Bletchleyhadoutgrownhim.Travis,whoseedictswereissuedinacurioustrademarkbrownink,was generallyconsideredasuccessinhisnewrole,notleastbysuchinfluentialcreativefiguresas Welchman.Whenanothercodebreaker,RalphBennett,returnedthatsummerfromdetacheddutyin theMiddleEast,hefoundthattheatmospherehadchangedmarkedly:‘Ihadleftasoneofagroupof enthusiasticamateurs.Ireturnedtoaprofessionalorganisationwithstandardsandanacknowledged reputationtomaintain.Successwasnolongeranoccasionalprize,butthenaturalrewardofrelentless attentiontodetail.’ Throughout1942,Bletchley’sactivitieswerehamperedbyadesperateshortageofbombes,and thusbyargumentabouttheirbestemployment.InJanuarythearmy-LuftwaffeHut6wasreceiving 1,400interceptsaday,ofwhichanaverageof580werebroken,aproportionthatslowlyincreased, reachingabout50percentbyMay1943.Oftennomorethanonethree-wheelbombewasavailableat anygiventimetoworkontheSharkU-boatcipher,becausetheothersofwhatwasstillonlyahandful ofmachineswerecommittedtobreakingarmyandairtraffic.Thecodebreakerssaidlaterthatthey wouldhaveneededtenfour-wheelbombes–whichdidnotthenexist–significantlytoaccelerate theirprogress.ByNovember,anoteofdesperationhadenteredtheAdmiralty’spleastothePark aboutShark.TheBattleoftheAtlantic,saidthenavy’sOperationalIntelligenceCentre,was‘theone campaignwhichBParenotatpresentinfluencingtoanymarkedextent–anditistheonlyonein whichthewarcanbelostunlessBPdohelp’.Acriticalbreakthroughwasimminent,however.On30 OctoberintheEasternMediterraneanU-559wasattackedbyanescortgroup,andforcedtothe surfacebydepth-charging.TonyFasson,thirty-year-oldfirstlieutenantofthedestroyerPetard,along withAbleSeamanColinGrazier,hastilystrippednakedandswamsixtyyardstothestricken submarine,thenhauledthemselvesintotheconningtower.Thecrewhadopenedtheseacocksbefore abandoningtheirboat,andtheseawasfloodinginevenasthetwomensearchedthecontrolroom withdesperateurgency. Theyfoundtreasure:thesecondeditionoftheWetterkurzschlussel,orweathershortsignalbook, foritsEnigma.Havingwrappedthisandotherdocumentsinwaterproofing,FassonandGrazier handedthemupthehatchtosixteen-year-oldNAAFIcanteenassistantTommyBrown,whohad followedinswimmingtotheU-boat.Heinturnpassedthepackagestothecrewofawhaleboat,which arrivedalongsideinthenickoftime.Brown,acivilian,livedtoreceiveaGeorgeMedalforhis daring,butthetwosupremelydedicatedBritishsailorspushedtheirluckbyplungingoncemoreinto thesubmarine’scontrolroom,possiblyinthebeliefthatthattheymightretrieveaciphermachine. Bletchleydidnotneedthis,forithadalreadyreconstructedthewiringofafour-rotorEnigma:itwas thesignalbooksthatmattered.U-559suddenlyvanishedintotheMediterranean,takingwithitFasson andGrazier,bothofwhomreceivedposthumousGeorgeCrosses.Thecaptureddocumentsreached Bletchleyon24November,andmadepossiblethecriticalbreakintotheSharkkeyon13December, assistedbydatafromweatherdecryptssecuredbyHut10. Thatday,thecodebreakersteleprintedtotheAdmiralty’sOperationalIntelligenceCentrelocations fortwelveAtlanticU-boats.Theirpositionswerebynowaweekoutofdate,buttheysufficedto providecriticalguidanceabouttheGermans’likelycourses.Thereafter,Sharksignalswere frequentlybrokenwithintwenty-fourhours,thoughthedelaysometimesextendedtoforty-eight.This wasoneoftheindisputablydecisivemomentsoftheintelligencewar.OnceregularSharkdecrypts begantoflowthroughtotheRoyalNavy,thebalanceinthewaratseashifteddramatically.Though Hut8latersufferedmoredelaysanddifficultieswithShark,neverthereafterwasBritishcontrolof theAtlanticsearouteseriouslythreatened,andU-boatsinkingssoared. AmongmuchelseremarkableaboutBletchleywerenotitsperiodicrowsandtantrums,butthatthe front-linecodebreakers,whoseaverageagewastwenty-three,sustainedsuchadegreeoffellowship. DerekTauntdescribedhowtheyfelt‘devotedtothetaskofoutwittingtheenemyandhappytobepart ofacomplicatedorganizationdesignedtodojustthat’.RolfNoskwithpaidtributetowhathe describedastheHuts’‘exemplaryleadership’.Theintegrityofthedecodingoperationwasmuch assistedbythepersonalfriendshipbetweenStuartMilner-BarryofHut6andHughAlexanderofHut 8.Buttranquillitycouldneverbeattainablewhenthousandsofmenandwomenwereworkingunder appallingpressurearoundtheclock,monthuponmonth,yearafteryear,knowingthatlivesdepended upontheirefforts.On15May1943WelchmanwrotetoNigeldeGrey,apologisingforanexplosion ofrageduringadiscussionaboutorganisationandshortageofresources,anongoingbugbear.‘My touchiness,’hewrote,‘isprobablyduetothefactthatIalwayshavetheextremevalueandurgencyof ourworkverymuchonmymind.ThroughoutthewholehistoryofHut6therehasneverbeenatime atwhichIfeltthatwewerebeingasefficientaswecouldbeandyoucanimaginethatthishasbeena heavyandcontinualstrain…Thepresentsituationisanabsolutescandal,butthereisnothingwelack nowthathasnotbeenaskedforagainandagain.Sopleaseforgivemeforbeingsomewhatbitterand ill-tempered.’ Headded:‘Agreatdealoftheworkisterriblymonotonousanddeadlydull,andthishasavery seriouseffectonmoraleoveralongperiod.Someofthegirlsarealmostphysicallysickatthesight ofaType-Xmachine.Now,ifourgirlscrackupasmanyhavedone,weareabsolutelysunk,andno amountofbelatedassistancewillsaveus…Incidentally,couldyoupossiblypersuadeTravistoget [Air-MarshalCharles]Medhurst[RAFdirectorofintelligence]and[theCIGSGen.SirAlan]Brooke tospendevenoneminutetellingthegirlsthattheirworkisimportant?YourseverGordon.’But difficultiespersistedinsecuringqualifiedpersonnel,notleastbecausesofewpeopleinWhitehallhad anyinklingofthesupremepriorityofGC&CS’swork.WhenBPneededpersonneltooperatepunchcardmachines,itsrecruitersturnedtoemployeesoftheJohnLewisPartnership,thedepartment-store chainwhichhadpersonneltrainedtousethem.Astoundingly,aftertenwomenhadbeenselected,the MinistryofLabourinsistedthattheyshouldinsteadbedispatchedtodolandwork.Aninternalmemo attheParkseethed:‘TheJohnLewisepisodeisadisgrace.’Thegirlswereeventuallyreleasedto GC&CS,butonlyafterabitterwranglewiththecivilbureaucracy. Fromthewar ’sfirstdaytoitslast,securitywasanobsessionofeveryAlliedofficerprivytothe Ultrasecret.In1941acertainCol.Gribble,whohadservedasanairliaisonofficerwiththeRAFin Francein1940,publishedabookentitledDiaryofaStaffOfficer,whichcausednear-hysteriawhen Whitehallnoticed,becauseitcontainedreferencestounidentified‘secretsources’.Gribble’swork hadbeenpassedbyacensorwhoknewnothingofBletchleyPark.WhatifsomebodyinBerlinreadit, anddrewlethalinferencesaboutthevulnerabilityofGermany’sciphers?MI5boughtupandpulped 7,000unsoldcopiesofthebook,trustingtoluckthatnoneofitsexistingbuyershadGermanfriends. BeforethefallofSingaporeinFebruary1942,thekeylocalUltraandYServicepersonnelreceived priorityforevacuation,asdidtheirAmericancounterpartsonCorregidortwomonthslater.Hadthey fallenintocaptivity,notonlywouldtheyhavesufferedaghastlyfatealongsideotherBritishand Australianprisoners,andtheirrareskillshavebeenlost,buttherisktoAlliedcodebreakingwas frighteningiftheywereexposedtointerrogationandtorture. MostofBletchley’sstaffdisplayedmarvellousconscientiousnessaboutsecrecy,allthemore remarkableamongyoungmenandwomen–StationX’sfootsoldiers–performinghumdrum functions.In1941aciviliandoctorinNottinghamwrotetotheGC&CSauthorities,reportingthatone ofhispatients,aWrennamedAdeleMoloney,wasinbedwithahightemperature,havingoverstayed herleavewithsymptomsofacuteexhaustion.Hewrote:‘MissMoloneyhashypertrophyofthe consciencetosuchanextentthatshewillnotdivulgethesmallestdetailofwhatshedoes,eventhough itisagainstherinterests.AsIfinditdifficulttobelievethatthisyounggirlisonworkwhichisso importantthatherdoctormusthavehishandstiedbylackofknowledge,IthoughtIwouldwriteto askforyourcomments.’Bletchleyrespondedblandlythat‘thereisintheordinarywaynothingthat weknowofintheworkthatshedoesthatisinanywaylikelytobeprejudicialtoherhealth.Thesame workisdonebyalargenumberofothergirls,noneofwhomsofarasweknowhavesufferedinany way.’ButBPtoldthedoctorthatMissMoloney’sdiscretionwasnotmerelycorrect,but‘highly commendable’,andsoindeeditwas. Therewasmuchuneaseamongtheadministratorsaboutthesecurityriskposedbytherolling populationofcooks,cleanersandworkmenwhoservicedStationX.A1941reportreflecteduneasily: ‘NewfacesarebeingsentdailyfromtheLabourExchangetoBletchleyPark.’Aseriesofflagrant breachesinthespringof1942promptedamagisterialmemorandumtoallpersonnelfromthePark’s seniorsecurityofficer:‘Therehavebeenrecentinstancesamongyouofaspiritofsuchreckless disregardfortheconsequencesofindiscretionaswouldseemtoarguenotonlyaconditionof ignoranceorfolly,butacontemptforthelawsbywhicheachoneofusknowshimselftobebound.In oneinstance[aBPstaffer]disclosedthenatureoftheirdutieswithinherfamilycircle…[this]was repeatedbyoneofitsmembersinmixedcompany,actuallyatacocktailparty,whenceitwasduly reportedtome.Inanotherinstanceoneofthemostvitaltasksinwhichtheorganisationisengaged wasdisclosed,possiblyinaspiritofprideorostentation,inanafter-dinnerconversationtothe Seniorsofthisperson’soldCollege,whenceareportreachedme…Itwouldbeareflectiononyour intelligencetosupposethatyoudonotrealise…thatanidlepieceofboastingorgossip…maybe passedtotheenemyandcause,notonlythebreakdownofoursuccessfuleffortshere,butthe sacrificeofthelivesofoursailors,soldiersandairmen,perhapsyourownbrothers,andmayeven prejudiceourultimatehopesofvictory.’ Ifthisbroadsidewasfiercelyworded,itwasnotinthesmallestdegreeextravagant.BletchleyPark wasthejewelinthecrownofBritain’swareffort,oneofitsprincipalassetsinthestruggletosavethe nationfromNazienslavement.AlanBrookewroteinhisdiaryaftervisitingGC&CSinApril1942: ‘Awonderfulsetofprofessorsandgenii!Imarvelattheworktheysucceedindoing.’Betrayalofits secretscouldovernighthavecrippledthecauseoffreedom–mostimmediatelybydenyingtothe RoyalNavyitskeytothelocationsofDönitz’sU-boats.WellbeforetheSovietUnionbecamea supposedallyinJune1941,BritishtraitorswerepassingtoNKVDagentswhateverpearlsofUltra theythoughtmightbeofinteresttoMoscow;itwasfortunatethatStalindidnotinformHitlerof Bletchley’sdoings–inthemonthsbefore‘Barbarossa’,hewasdesperatetoappeaseBerlin. ItwasanevenlargerstrokeoffortunethatGermany’scommanderssustainedtheirdoggedbelief inEnigma’sinviolability.Earlyinthe1930stheheadcryptanalystofGöring’sForschungsamtcipher unit,DrGeorgSchröder,assertedpassionately:‘thewholeEnigmaisgarbage!’Noheedwastakenof hiswarning,whichwasdeemedonlyrelevanttothecommercialmachine,whichlackedaplugboard. InOctober1939Lt.Col.Ruzek,formerheadofCzechcryptanalysis,revealedtoGerman interrogatorsthatthePoleshadbeenworkingwiththeFrenchtobreakEnigmatraffic.Incaptured Polishfiles,theNazisdiscoveredthree1938plain-languagetranslationsofsignalsfromaGerman cruiserinSpanishwaters.PolishPoWswereexhaustivelyinterrogatedinattemptstodiscoverhow thesemessageshadbeendecrypted,buttheAbwehrdrewablank:almostallthemenwhoknewthe answerswereatthattimebeyondtheirreach.OKW/Chi’scryptanalystsinBerlinfeltintensely frustratedthat,whiletheyweresupposedlyresponsibleforensuringthesecurityoftheWehrmacht’s communications,theywereexpresslyforbiddentoconducttestsonbreakingEnigmatraffic.They nonethelessbelievedthesysteminstitutionallysafe,andarguedthatoccasionalsignalscouldonlybe brokenifdispatchedbycarelessoperatorswhoneglectedprocedure.Evenin1946theWehrmacht’s chiefcryptanalyst,WilhelmFenner,maintainedstubbornly:‘TheEnigmawasregardedasantiquated, butitwassecurewhenproperlyused.’ ItispossibletoidentifyseveralmomentsofthewaratwhichBritishblunderscouldhaveenabled theGermanstorecognisethattheircipherswerecompromised,andplugthegusherofintelligence flowingfromBletchleyPark.On24August1941,ChurchillmadeaBBCbroadcastinwhichhe alludedtoexplicitnumbersofJewsknowntohavebeenmurderedbytheSSbehindtheEasternFront. TheGermansnoticed,andwithindaysOberstgruppenführerKurtDaluegeissuedanorderthatdetails ofsuchkillingsshouldnolongerbementionedinradiotraffic:‘Thedangerofenemydecryptionof wirelessmessagesisgreat.Forthisreasononlynon-sensitiveinformationshouldbetransmitted.’ OneconsequenceofChurchill’sslipwasthatwheninOctober1942theForeignOfficecompileda reportonknownGermanatrocities,especiallythosecommittedagainstJews,thiswasnotpublicly released,toavoidanynewriskofcompromisingintelligencesources. ItwasremarkablethattheGermanhighcommandfailedtodrawfar-reachingconclusionsfrom Churchill’sAugust1941words,andlikewiseayearlaterwhenGermaninterrogationofAllied prisonersrevealedthatMontgomery’sEighthArmyhadbeenexpectingtheAfrikaKorps’attackat AlamHalfainNorthAfrica.Earlyin1942also,DönitzbecameacutelysuspiciousthattheAllieswere monitoringhiscommunicationswithU-boats.Hewaspersuadedthathisfearsweregroundlessby Britishcarelessnesswiththeirownconvoycodes,whichwerebeingbrokenbytheKriegsmarine’s decryptionservice,theB-Dienst.IfEnigmawasindeedinsecure,theadmiralreasoned,theBritish wouldhavelearnedaboutthisyawningchasmintheirownsecurity:anationcleverenoughtocrack U-boatsignalswouldemploybettercodesofitsown.TheU-boatchiefwascarefulenoughto introducethefour-rotorEnigma,butinsufficientlysotoquestionthefundamentalbasisofthesystem. PotentiallythemostdangerousthreattotheUltrasecretalsocamein1942.On5MaytheAustralian freighterNankinsailedfromFremantleforCalcuttawithacargoofexplosives,180crewand162 passengers.IntheIndianOceanearlyonthemorningof10May,asmallfloatplanecircledtheship. Soonafterwardsitsparent,theGermanraidingcruiserThor,closedinandopenedfire.Nankin signalled‘Raidersighted,’andhercaptainjettisonedtheconfidentialbooksbeforesurrenderingan hourafterthefirstshot.ThepassengersandcrewweretransferredtoThoranditsaccompanying supplyship,alongwithhundredsofsacksofmail.Amongthese,theGermansidentifieda consignmentfromtheCombinedOperationsIntelligenceCentreatWellington,NewZealand.Its contentsincludeda‘MostSecret’summaryfortheperiod21Marchto20April,largelybasedon Ultramaterial,whichgavethepositionsofeveryknownAlliedandenemywarshipandmerchant vesselinthePacificandIndianOceans.Withcriminalcarelessness,thesedocumentshadbeen dispatchednotbyhandofNankin’scaptain,butinsteadwiththegeneralmail. EventhoughtheCOICdatawaswelloutofrealtime,imaginativeanalysisoftheintelligence summarybytheAbwehrwouldhaveshowntheGermansthatsomeatleastoftheirciphers,aswellas thoseoftheJapanese,werecompromised.Suchscrutinyappearsnevertohavetakenplace.The Thor’scaptainsawnospecialurgencyaboutsendingthecaptureddocumentstoBerlin.Onlyatthe endofJuly,aftertheraidingcruiser ’ssupplyshipdockedatYokohama,didGermany’snavalattaché inTokyoreceivetheCOICpapers.AfurthermonthelapsedbeforeBerlinauthorisedhimtopassthe documentstoitsAsianally.Thereafter,theJapanesenavychangeditsmaincode,sothattheUSNavy lacked‘realtime’decryptstoempoweritsoperationsduringthe11–12OctoberBattleofCape Esperance,the26OctoberBattleofSantaCruz,andthe13–15NovemberGuadalcanalactions. ItwouldbefancifultosuggestthattheNankincapturesthusalteredthecourseofthenavalwar, becausethecodealterationwaspartofaregularroutine:theJapanesestilldoggedlyrefusedto acknowledgethattheirentirecommunicationssystemwasvulnerable.ButiftheyhadreadtheAllied COICdocumentssoonaftertheGermansgottheirhandsonthem,andhadpossessedamore sophisticatedcapabilityforassessingintelligence,theywouldhavechangedtheirciphersweeks, insteadofdays,beforelaunchingtheirJuneassaultonMidway,withmomentousconsequences.The BritishdonotappeartohavetoldtheAmericansabouttheNankinloss.Thismayhavebeenbecause theysufferedanattackofwell-deservedembarrassmentaboutamajorbreachofsecurity.Itwasthe samestorywhenthesecondoftwocopiesoftheJapanesePurpleciphermachine,presentedtothe BritishbytheirAmericancreators,wasdispatchedtotheUltrateaminSingaporebyfreighter.Itis knowntohaveleftDurbaninDecember1941,butthereaftervanishedwithouttrace,itsfateunknown fromthatdaytothis. NoWhitehallcorrespondenceconcerningtheNankinhasthusfarbeenfoundinBritisharchives, anditwouldbeunjustifiedtobuildtoohighatowerofspeculationarounditsstory.TheAllies escapedsignificantconsequencesfromtheirblunder–andfromtheotherscitedabove–becausethe intelligencesystemsofGermanyandJapanlackedthecoherenceandimaginationtoprofitasthey shouldhavedonefromtheirhaulofAlliedsecrets.Onefurthercriticallydangerousmomentshould bementioned:inNovember1942theGermanssweptacrossunoccupiedFrance.Amongthosewhom theytookintocustodyinVichywerethreePoleswhohadservedinGustaveBertrand’scodebreaking departmentsince1940,andbeforethathadbeenengagedinPoland’sowncryptographicoperation.In March1943,twosuchprisonerswereinterrogatedbyGermansigintexpertsinthepresenceofan Abwehrofficer.Hadthementoldwhattheyknew,orcouldhavesurmised,abouttheAllies’progress incrackingEnigma,theworstcouldhavehappened.Fortunately,beforebeingquestionedthePoles werebrieflyalonetogether,andcoordinatedexplanationswhichwereaccepted:thatwhilesome traffichadbeenbrieflybrokenin1938,improvedGermansystemsthereafterclosedthebreach.Here weretwomorepeopletowhomtheAlliesowedadebtfortheirrolepreservingtheUltrasecret. CleverermeninBerlinandTokyomighthavemademuchofthematerialandprisonersthatfellinto theirhands,andabruptlyhaltedthemusicfortheAllies’wondrousdanceacrosstheether. 2 F LI RTI NGW I TH A M ER I C A FromthedayWinstonChurchillbecameprimeministeruntilPearlHarbornineteenmonthslater,his foremostpoliticalpurposewastodragtheUnitedStatesintothewar,becauseonlythuscouldthe embattledislandhopetoaccomplishmorethanitsownsurvival.Tothatend,theBritishsoughtthe closestcooperationtheAmericanswouldcountenance.Theyprofessedtowishtoextendthisto intelligence,butintruthsoughtanotablyone-sidedrelationship,whichprotectedmostofBritain’s secrets.Inthespringof1940,StewartMenziesaskedtheCanadianbusinessmanSirWilliam StephensontotrytoopenalinktoJ.EdgarHoover,directoroftheFBI.Stephenson,eagerforatoptableroleforhimself,setaboutthismissionwithawill,usinganunlikelymutualacquaintance,the formerworldheavyweightboxingchampionGeneTunney,withwhomhehadsparredinFranceback in1918.InthosedaystheCanadianhadbeenafighterpilot,whowentontomakeafortunebefore creatinghisownindustrialintelligencenetworkinthe1930s,fromwhichheofferedmaterialtothe Britishgovernment.ThisopenedarelationshipwithDesmondMortonandDickEllisofBroadway, whichcontinuedaftertheoutbreakofwar.Hoover,beforemeetingtheebullientCanadian,tookcare tosecureWhiteHouseapproval.StephensonreportedbacktoLondonthattheFBIchiefwaskeento cooperatewithMI6,andhadsuggestedthathisvisitorshouldsecuresomeofficialtitletoformalise hisstatusintheUS. MenziespromptlygaveStephensonamodestcoverroleasPassportControlOfficerinNewYork, wherehesetupshopon21June1940.ThereaftertheCanadianbuiltasubstantialorganisationwhich inJanuary1941acquiredthetitleofBritishSecurityCoordination.BSC,quarteredonthe35thand 36thfloorsoftheRockefellerCenteronFifthAvenue,waschargedwithsabotagingAxisoperations, liaisingwiththeAmericansandgatheringintelligenceaboutenemyactivity.Italsomanagedanti-Axis propagandathroughouttheAmericas.Initsroleasaflag-carrierforBritainanditsspies,itenjoyed considerablesuccessuntiltherespectivenationalintelligenceservicesbegantobypassBSCinfavour ofdoingbusinesswitheachotherdirect,inthespringof1942aftertheUScameintothewar. NewYorkbecameMI6’smostimportantout-station,fromwhichitsagentssetforthtotryto penetrateAxis-runcompaniesandforeignembassies.BSCcouldclaimcreditforsuchcoupsas tippingofftheFBIinNovember1940,whenaMexicoCityinformantrevealedthatfourGerman shipsintendedtoruntheBritishblockadeacrosstheGulfofMexico:theUSNavystoppedtheships. Likewise,J.EdgarHooverwarnedBSCthattheItaliansintendedtotransfertoSouthAmericaalmost $4millionincash,whichmightbeusedtobankrollsabotage.Two-thirdsofthemoneygotthrough, butaBSCagentalertedpoliceinMexicoCityaboutthesmugglingoperation:theyopenedthebags andconfiscated$1.4million.Onthedebitside,however,Stephensonwasallegedtohaverecruited somefranklydisreputableofficers.GuyLiddellofMI5fumedaboutoneinparticular,IngramFraser, whowasallegedtohavebeen‘runningamistressinWashingtonDCwhowassupposedtobeacting asanagentontheFinns.Shewasgetting$500amonthforherflatand$500forherservices,allpaid outofofficefunds.’BSCwastedasmuchenergyonabsurditiesaseveryotherintelligence organisation:threeofitscleverestofficers–OxforddonsFreddieAyer,BillDeakinandGilbert Hignet–spentweeksplanningaresponsetoapossibleJapaneseinvasionofSouthAmerica. Whatmatteredmost,however,wasStephenson’sliaisonrole:heforgedclosepersonalrelations withmanyprominentadministrationfigures,andespeciallywithColonelWilliamDonovan,who wouldbecomethemostinfluentialsinglepersonalityinAmerica’swartimeforeignintelligence operations.Donovanwasanaturalshowman,wheretheotherbelligerents’spymastersweremenof theshadowsor–inthecaseofStalin’sintelligencechiefs–creaturesofthenight.Bornin1883, ‘WildBill’rosefromapoorIrishbackgroundinupstateNewYorktobecomeaclassmateof FranklinRooseveltatColumbiaLawSchool;helaterbecameaninfluentialfriendofthepresident.He foughtwithPershingagainstPanchoVilla,thencommandedtheNewYorkIrish69thRegimentonthe WesternFrontin1917–18,returninghomeashisnation’smostdecoratedsoldier,acolonelwiththe MedalofHonorandareasonablyauthenticreputationasahero.ThereafterhefulfilledseveralfactfindingmissionsfortheWhiteHouse.Followingthefirstofthese,tothenewSovietUnionin1919, DonovanurgedWashingtonagainstsupportingWhiteRussia,describingworkersinSiberiaas ‘yearningforBolshevism’.AsUSAttorneyfortheWesternDistrictofNewYork,hebecamefamous –ornotorious–forhisenergeticenforcementofProhibition.Later,thoughhimselfaRepublican,he visitedAbyssiniaandSpainasanemissaryforRoosevelttheDemocrat.Hereturnedhomean implacablefoeofHitler,andadvocateofUSengagementinEurope. In1940and1941,DonovanmadetripstoLondonduringwhichStephensonensuredthathe receivedred-carpettreatment,includinglunchwiththeprimeminister.SomeBritishofficersrecoiled fromthevisitor ’sbrashness.Maj.Gen.JohnKennedy,directorofmilitaryoperations,wroteinhis diary:‘Donovan…isextremelyfriendlytous&ashrewdandpleasantfellowandgoodtalker.ButI couldnotbutfeelthatthisfat&prosperouslawyer,acitizenofacountrynotinthewar…possessed verygreatassurancetobeabletolaydownthelawsogliblyaboutwhatweandotherthreatened nationsshould&sh[oul]dnotdo.’ Donovan’sinfluenceattheWhiteHousenonethelessensuredcontinuingBritishgratitudeand goodwill.InSeptember1940hepersuadedRoosevelttocommittheUStoapolicyofintelligence collaborationwithChurchill’snation.WhenGodfrey,thedirectorofnavalintelligence,visitedtheUS inMay1941withhispersonalassistantCommanderIanFleming,inNewYorkthetwomenstayedat Donovan’sapartment.Theadmiral’stripwasnotanunqualifiedsuccess:hewasshockedbythedepth ofhostilitybetweentheUSArmyandUSNavy,andgotlittlechangeoutofHoover,whowasless interestedinjoiningthewaragainsttheAxisthaninsecuringtheFBI’smonopolycontrolofthe nation’sintelligenceactivities.Inthis,Hooverwasunsuccessful.WhilehisBureauretained responsibilityforcounter-espionage–theroleofMI5inBritain–GodfreyandStephensonplayed somepartinconvincingtheRooseveltadministrationthatthecountryneededanewintelligence organisation,andthatDonovanwasthemantorunit.FromJuly1941heheldthetitleofCoordinator ofInformation,thoughinrealityhisnewOfficeofWarInformationwasanembryosecretservice, andhesetaboutsupervisingitsbirthandprecociousgrowthwithenergyandexuberance. DonovanandStephenson–thelatterknownintheUSas‘LittleBill’ratherthan‘Intrepid’,which wasmerelyhistelegraphicaddress–werebuccaneersboth,whosharedcreditforsecuringa reasonablyfreehandforBritishintelligenceoperationsintheAmericas,againstthewishesoftheFBI andtheStateDepartment.Theirrapportdidnot,however,changeanoverarchingreality:thewartime relationshipbetweenBritainandtheUnitedStateswascharacterisedbytensionsandsuspicions, merelypaintedoverbythemagnificentrhetoricofChurchillandRoosevelt.In1940–41theBritish werefightingfortheirliveswhileAmericanswerenot,andindeedoperatedacash-and-carrypolicy forthemodestquotaofweaponsandsuppliestheysoldtoChurchill’speople.MostofAmerica’s defencecommunityhadsomerespectforBritain,butlittleaffection. TheBritishofficersprivytotheUltrasecretknewthattheywerecustodiansofoneoftheir country’smostpreciousassets,whichwouldbecomeinstantlyforfeitifanyhintoftheirgrowing successesreachedBerlin.Americansecuritywaspoor,asmightbeexpectedofapeoplenotyet committedtothestruggle,whowereanywayconstitutionallyill-suitedtokeepingsecrets.British intelligencechiefswereeagerforAmericangoodwill,butdoubtfulhowmuchofpracticalvaluetheir UScounterpartscouldtellthem.Pendingevidencethatatwo-waytrafficcouldbenefittheirembattled island,theydeterminedtogiveawayaslittleaspossible.Moreover,asananguishedWhitehallhand scribbledduringthe1941debateabouthowmuchtotellavisitingUSdelegation:‘Whatwillthey thinkiftheyfindwehavebeenreadingtheirownstuff?’–amildembarrassmentaboutwhich ChurchillcamecleantoRoosevelton25February1942,withtheassurancethatdecryptionofUS materialhadstoppedimmediatelyafterPearlHarbor. Thesparse1940–41meetingsandexchangesbetweenthetwonation’scodebreakersand intelligenceofficerstookplaceinaclimateofmutualwariness,anditwastheAmericanswho displayedgreaterfrankness.On31August1940theBritishweretoldthattheSignalsIntelligence ServicehadbrokentheJapanesePurplekey.Thisrevelationpromptednoimmediateinvitationto Bletchley:whentheTizardmissionvisitedtheUSinSeptembertoshowoffsuchrevolutionary technologyasthecavitymagnetron–atemptingmorsel,keytonew-agetacticalradar,andintended topromoteAmericanreciprocity–informationaboutUltrawasexplicitlyexcluded.OntheAmerican side,LauranceSaffordoftheUSNavy’sOp-20-Gcodebreakingteamwaslikewiseopposedto sharingitssecretswiththeBritish.InDecember1940thetwonationsreachedanagreementtopool informationaboutcodebreaking,butbothwereslowtobringthisintoeffect.OnlyonJapanese materialwasthereimmediateclosecollaboration:inFebruary1941theBritishcryptanalysisteamin SingaporeanditsAmericancounterpartinthePhilippinesexchangedliaisonofficers,who discoveredthatbothwereinaboutthesameplacewithTokyo’scodes.Intheearlywaryearsthe BritishdidbetterthantheAmericansinmonitoringsomelow-levelJapanesearmedforcestraffic, thoughtheyfailedtobreakintotheirhigherciphers.Nonetheless,whenBritishforcesin1941 requestedurgentAmericanassistanceinsecuringhigh-altitudephotographsofJapan’snavalbases, Washingtonvetoedtheproposal. AttheheightoftheLuftwaffeBlitzonBritaintwoFBIagents,HughCleggandClarenceHince, visitedLondontostudy‘lawenforcementintimeofwar ’.GuyLiddellofMI5thoughtthatwhilethe visitorslookedsomewhatthuggish,Cleggseemed‘averygoodfellow’.Suchwarmthwasnot reciprocated.Ontheirreturn,thetwomendeliveredtoHooverareportdepictingtheBritish, explicitlyMI5andtheMetropolitanPolice,intermsofwitheringscorn.Theycomplainedthatitwas difficulttoarrangemeetingsbefore10a.m.orafter4p.m.because‘thetransportsituationisvery difficult,youknow’.Theysaidthat‘Thefact“exploratoryluncheons”wereusuallytwohoursin lengthmadeourworkingdayratherlimited,particularlywhencomparedtothecustomaryhoursthat officialsoftheFBIareengagedinofficialbusiness.’TheyconcludedthattheBritish‘mightwinthe wariftheyfinditconvenient’.ThisreportsetthetonefortheFBI’sviewoftheBritishfordecades thereafter. InJanuary1941,whenanAmericancodebreakingteam–twoarmy,twonavy–paidapioneering visittoBritain,theybroughtwiththemaremarkablygenerousgift:amimickedPurplemachine,of whichasecondcopywashandedoverlater.TheBritish,however,reciprocatedcautiously.With WinstonChurchill’sexplicitsanctiontheyadmittedthevisitorstoBletchley,andexplainedtheHut system.Theyrevealedthebombes,GC&CS’smostcriticalinnovation,butthereafterprevaricated aboutfulfillingAmericanrequeststobegivenanexampleofwhatWashingtondescribedas‘a cypher-solvingmachine’.Therewereverygoodreasonsforthis–theUSwasnotinthewar,andthe bombeswerescarcepearls.TheAmericansrecognisedthattheyhadseeninactionasystemway aheadofanythingtheUSarmedforcesweredoing.AlfredMcCormack,whobecamethesecretary forwar ’sspecialassistantoncomint,saidlaterofBletchley:‘It’snotgood–it’ssuperb.’ SomepeopleinWashington,however,wereirkedbyapparentBritishpusillanimity.They themselvesmadelittleseriousheadwayinreadingEnigmatrafficuntilfloodgatesopenedin1943, and–inthewordsofanexasperatedBritishofficer–‘showednoappreciationoftheextentofthe problemsfacingBletchleyParkandBritain’.ThePark’sWashingtonrepresentative,CaptainEdward Hastings,reportedinNovember1941that‘thereisgraveunrestanddissatisfactionaboutfree exchangeofspecialintelligence’.SomeAmericansweredoggedlyconvincedthattheBritishwere holdingoutonthem.AslateasDecember1942,whenAlanTuringvisitedtheUS,hewasdenied admissiontotheBellLaboratoriesinrevengeforallegedBritishfoot-draggingaboutcollaboration, andwasfinallyallowedinsideonlyafterahugeandprotractedtransatlanticrow.AlthoughWilliam FriedmanlaterforgedwarmpersonalrelationswithBP’sseniorpersonnel,hehimselfmadehisfirst visittoBritainonlyinMay1943,aboutthetimeaformalandindeedhistoricintelligence-sharing pactwasagreedbetweenthetwonations.Meanwhilecollaborationremainedwaryandincomplete. EvenafterPearlHarbor,BletchleyanditsownersremainedfearfulnotonlyaboutAmericansecurity shortcomings,butalsoaboutthedangerthatthisbrightestjewelintheimperialcrownmight somehowbesnatchedfromthembytheboundlesslyrich,irresistiblydominantnewpartnerinthe GrandAlliance.AlastairDennistonwrotethatforBritainUltrawas‘almostlifeblood’,whereasthe AmericansseemedtoviewEnigma,withthedetachmentofdistanceandfreedomfrommortalperil, merelyas‘anewandveryinterestingproblem’. TheWarOffice’sdeputydirectorofmilitaryintelligencewroteon17February1942,tenweeks afterPearlHarbor,thatintalkingtotheAmericans,‘thegeneralpolicyistobeasfrankaspossible butnoinformationwillbegivenregardingourownfutureoperations,orsourcesofinformation, norwillanyinformationbepassedwhichemanatesfromspecialmostsecretsources[Ultra]’.On16 MarchthecabinetsecretarySirEdwardBridgeswroteamemorandumwarningthattelephone conversationsbetweenLondonandWashington‘stillrevealinstancesofgross[American]lackof discretion’.StewartMenziesandhisofficersatMI6remainedreluctanttoopentheirheartsandfiles totheirnewbrothers-in-arms. Unfortunately,theBritishobfuscationwhichpersistedthroughmuchof1942prompted misunderstandingsandmountingangeramongsomeAmericans.Thesecrystallisedaroundabelief– entirelymistaken–thatBletchleyhadbrokenintotheU-boatSharkkey,butwasrefusingtotellthe USNavyaboutit.Op-20-G’seventualexasperatedripostetoBletchley’sunwillingnesstosurrendera bombewastoannounceinSeptember1942–andtobegintofulfilinAugustthefollowingyear–its owncommitmenttobuildfour-rotormodelsbythehundred.ThiswasatimewhentheBritishhadjust thirty-two.TheAmericanmachinesprovedtechnicallysuperiortotheBritishmodels,andalsomore reliable:inOctober1943thirty-ninewereoperationalandbyDecemberseventy-five,thoughbythe timethesebecameoperationalmuchoftheircapacityprovedsuperfluoustoUSNavyneeds. Intheearlywaryears,BritishintelligencecollaborationwiththeUSwascautious;onlyfrom1943 onwardsdiditbecomewholehearted.AswithsomuchelseaboutAnglo–Americanrelations, however,itislesssurprisingthattherewassomuchsquabblingattheoutset,intheyearsofAllied defeat,thanthatthepartnershipeventuallyachievedtheintimacythatitdid,intheyearsofvictory. *TheType-Xwasdevelopedin1934byWing-CommanderO.C.LywoodandErnestSmithofAirMinistrySignals,improvingupona borrowedcommercialEnigma,andenteredBritishservicethreeyearslater. 4 TheDogsthatBarked 1 ‘ LUC Y’ S ’ P EO P LE TheextraordinaryincidentoftheKremlin’sdogsinthenightwasthattheybarked,andbarked. Operation‘Barbarossa’,theJune1941NaziinvasionoftheSovietUnion,wasthedefiningeventof theSecondWorldWar–anditsmostbaffling,becauseitachievedsurprisewhenitsimminencewas manifest.ItwasatributetothelengthandstrengthofStalin’sarmthathumint–agentsofinfluence abroad–providedhimwithcomprehensivewarnings.AsearlyasJuly1940,NKVDmenoperatingin German-occupiedPolandwerereportingintenseWehrmachtactivity,barrack-buildingandtroop movements.Thatautumn,heinstructedCentretoopenaspecialfileonHitler ’sintentionscodenamed ‘Zateya’–‘Venture’.InSeptemberthisshowedmassiveGermanredeploymentsclosetotheRussian border,togetherwithcontinuingconstructionoftroopaccommodation.TheGermans’Moscow embassywasreportedbyaSovietagentwithinitswallstobestrivingtorecruitWhiteRussiansand intellectualdissidentsfortheAbwehr.InNovember1940Stalinwastoldthateighty-fivedivisions, comprisingmorethantwo-thirdsofHitler ’sinfantry,weredeployedalongtheRussianfrontier. Duringthemonthsthatfollowed,however,someofthesetroopswereshiftedtothreaten,andthen tooccupy,RomaniaandGreece.Neitherin1941norsincehavemostWesternersgraspedtheintensity ofStalin’sconvictionthatHitler ’sambitionswerefocusedontheBalkans,whereRussiaalsohadvital interests.NordotheyacknowledgethedepthofhishatredanddistrustofBritain.Itwasbarelytwenty yearssinceWinstonChurchillhadledacrusadetoreversetheBolshevikRevolutionbyforceof arms.Stalinsawhimself,bynomeansmistakenly,astheobjectofasustainedChurchilliancampaign todriveawedgeintohispactwithHitlerandforcehimtofightGermany,againstRussia’sinterests andinpursuitofthoseoftheBritishEmpire. ThemasteroftheKremlinrecognisedthatwarbetweentheNazisandtheSovietUnionmight ultimatelyproveunavoidable.AnAugust1940GRUreport,quotingHitler ’sambassadorinBelgrade, showedthatthiswascertainlytheotherparty’sview:‘ForGermanytheBalkansarethemost significantassetandoughttobeincludedinthe[Nazi-controlled]neworderofEurope;butsincethe USSRwouldneveragreetothat,awarwithherisinevitable.’Stalin,however,remainedconvinced thatitwasoverwhelminglyagainstHitler ’sintereststobreaktheNazi–SovietPactthatwasdelivering hugesuppliesofoilandcommoditiestoGermany.HebelieveditwasintheKremlin’sgifttoappoint thehourforashowdown,whichwasnotyet.Heclungtotheview,slavishlyendorsedbyBeria,that Hitlerwasengagedinamassivebluff,designedtocowRussiaintolettingGermanyhaveitswayin theBalkans.AugustoRosso,theItalianambassadorinMoscow,wroteon21September1940:‘The Germanshaveraisedabarrier[againsttheRussians]:themarchtothesouthhasbeenstopped,theoil isatthedisposaloftheGermans…TheDanubeisaGermanriver.Thisisthefirstdiplomaticdefeat ofComradeStalin…andthedefeatisevenmorehumiliatingbecauseitexplodesthedreamwhich throughoutthecenturieshasoccupiedaspecialplaceintheRussiansoul:[dominance]ofthesouthern meridian.’ FriedrichvonderSchulenberg,Germany’sambassador,helpedtoassuageMoscow’sfearsabout Berlin’sintentions,becausehisownhonestyandsincerityweremanifest,anddirectedtowards preservingpeace.BeriatoldStalinthatonceVichyFranceandSpainhadjoinedtheAxisasexpected, HitlerplannedtoinducehimtojoinapactthatwouldcloseasteelringaroundBritain:‘Pressurewas tobeexertedonRussia,’theSovietintelligencesupremowroteon24October1940,‘toreacha politicalagreementwithGermanywhichwoulddemonstratetotheentireworldthattheSovietUnion willnotholdaloof,andactivelyjointhestruggleagainstBritain,tosecureanewEuropeanorder.’In NovemberMolotovwasdispatchedtoBerlin,todiscover‘therealintentionsofGermany’sproposals fortheNewEurope’.TheforeignministermadeplainthatStalinstillsoughtcontrolofthemouthof theDanube,whichHitlerhadnointentionofconceding,andthevisitconfirmedGermany’sleaderin hiscommitmenttowar. TheNKVD’sinformantsinLondonasserted,correctly,thatmanyofBritain’sbusinessmenand bankersfavouredacompromisepeace.Moscowwasappalledbysuchaprospect,whichwouldmake Hitlerunstoppable.TheKremlinaspiredtoseeGermanyweakened,tomakeHitlermorebiddable. Thus,forallStalin’sdisdainforChurchillandhispeople,hewasdelightedbyBritishsuccesses againsttheLuftwaffeathomeandtheItaliansinNorthAfrica.IvanMaisky,theSovietambassadorin London,waxedlyricalabouttheprospects,writingon3November1940:‘Englandhasnotmerely survived,buthasstrengtheneditspositioncomparedwiththatwhichprevailedafterthefallofFrance …inthe“BattleofBritain”.Hitler,likeNapoleon135yearsearlier,hassufferedadefeat,hisfirst serioussetbackofthiswar;theconsequencesareimpossibletoforesee.’ Throughthewinterof1940–41,Stalinwasbatteredbycontrarywindsandfears.TheNKVDand GRUreportedinsistentlyandaccurately,ontheauthorityofitssecretWhitehallinformants,thatthe BritishwereconsideringabomberassaultonhisBakuoilwells,whichweresupplyingRussianfuel totheLuftwaffe.TheKremlinwasevenmoredismayedbyAxispreparationstoinvadeGreece,which couldpresageseizureoftheDardanelles,acenturies-oldRussiannightmare.IfTurkeycameintothe waroneitherside,StalinthoughtitsarmyliabletoinvadetheCaucasus,ofwhichtheOttomanshad beendispossessedbarelyseventyyearsearlier.VsevolodMerkulov,Beria’sdeputy,reportedintense TurkishintelligenceactivityontheRussianborder.MeanwhiletheTurks,fortheirpart,werefearful ofNaziaggression,andinJanuary1941theirembassiesbegantobrieftheRussiansaboutthe Germanbuild-upinRomania.TheGRUassertedon27January1941thattheBalkans‘remainedthe decisivefocusofpoliticalevents,particularlysinceaheadlongclashofGermanandSovietvital interestshasarisenthere’. ButalthoughStalinwasreceivingastreamofintelligenceabouttheNazithreattotheBalkans, therewasatorrentaboutthedirectmenacetotheSovietUnion.On5December1940Vladimir Dekanozov,SovietambassadorinBerlinandaveteranintelligenceofficer,receivedananonymous letter:‘ToComradesStalinandMolotov,veryurgent.Russia,pleasebealert,asHitlerissoongoing toattackyou.Itwillsoonbetoolate,butRussiaisasleepnow.Can’tyouseewhatishappeningonthe borders,fromMemeltotheBlackSea?EastPrussiaisfilledwithtroops,newunitsarearrivingday andnight…’MoscowwasinformedbyitsBerlinmilitaryattachéjustelevendaysafterHitlersigned hisDirective21on18December,callingontheWehrmacht‘tocrushSovietRussiainarapid campaign’.Inmid-March1941theSovietmilitaryattachéinBucharestreportedaGermanofficer tellingafriend:‘Wehavecompletelyalteredourplans.WeaimattheEast,attheUSSR.Weshall seizetheSoviets’grain,coalandoil.Weshallthenbeinvincibleandwillbeabletocontinuethewar againstEnglandandtheUnitedStates.’ BeriaandStalinnonethelessagreedthattherewasalternativeevidencetoshowthistobemere sabre-rattling:HitlerwasmakingashowofforceonRussia’sbordertoadvancehisBalkanpurposes. A20March1941GRUassessmentbyGen.FilipGolikovstatedwhatheknewhisreadershipwished tohear:‘ThemajorityoftheintelligencereportswhichindicatethelikelihoodofwarwiththeSoviet Unioninspring1941arederivedfromAnglo-Americansources,whoseimmediateobjectiveis undoubtedlytopromotetheworseningofrelationsbetweentheUSSRandGermany.’TheSwedish ministerinMoscow,VilhelmAssarasson,wasconsistentlywellinformedaboutNazidecisionmaking,andknewaboutthecommitmentto‘Barbarossa’.ButAssarasson’stipwasdiscounted, becauseitwasforwardedtotheKremlinbyStaffordCripps,theBritishenvoy.TheNKVDintercepted thedispatchesofTurkishambassadorHaydarAktay,whoalsocitedAssarasson’sinformation,along withreportsofHitler ’sindiscretionstoPrincePaulofYugoslavia,predictingwar.Aktay’sviewwas alsodismissed. InMarchSovietintelligencesufferedashock.Moscowconsidereditanimportantinteresttokeep YugoslaviaoutofHitler ’sgrasp.WhenitbecameawarethatPrincePaul,therulingregent,intended tothrowinhislotwiththeAxis,Gen.SolomonMilshteinandabandofGRU‘illegals’were dispatchedtoBelgradetoorganiseacoupagainsthim.TheywereconfoundedwhenBritain’sSOE pre-emptedthem,launchingitsowncouptoinstallKingPeterII.Moscowwasevenmoreappalleda fewdayslater,whentheWehrmachtsweptacrossYugoslaviainthefaceofnegligibleresistance.Yet eventhoughtheRussianssympathisedwithitspeople,asfellow-Slavs,Stalindismissedtheirpleasfor militaryassistance.HeremainedstubbornlydeterminednottobeprovokedbytheBritish–ashesaw it–intoanarmedstruggleagainstGermanyoverYugoslavia.HemerelysignedameaninglessnonaggressionagreementwithBelgrade,shortlybeforeGermantroopssweptitsnewgovernmentaside. Hehadsetacourse–tobuytimebeforeconfrontingHitler–andwasdeterminednothingshould deflecthimfromit,leastofalltheintelligencereportsthatswampedMoscowCentrebetween September1940andJune1941. ItishardtoassessthecontributionofSovietagentsinSwitzerlandatthistime,becausemodern knowledgeisalmostentirelydependentontheprincipals’latermemoirs.Allwerecompulsiveliars, bentuponinflatingtheirownroles.Thus,whatfollowsisevenmorespeculativethanmostaccounts ofRussianactivities.TheonsetofwarhadcreatedfinancialandlogisticaldifficultiesforAlexander Radó.TherewasnoSovietlegationinBernthroughwhichcashcouldbechannelledtohim,andhis cartographicbusinesslanguished.Hewasleftwithlittlemoneytofundhimselfandhisfamily,far lessaspynetwork.AlexanderFoote,trainedbyUrsulaHamburgertoserveasRadó’swirelessoperator,wasstrivingwithequallymeagrefundstosustainamasqueradeasaBritishgentlemanof leisure,hopingtositoutthewarinthecomfortofLausanne.Wirelessassumedanewimportancefor thenetworkafterthefallofFrance,becauseRadócouldnolongerusecourierstoshiftpaperreports viaParis.ToprovidegreatersecurityfortheRing’scommunications,heopenedasecondtransmitter operatedbyaGenevaelectricalengineernamedEdmondHamel,whowastrainedbyFoote.Hamel inspiredmockerybecausehewasaverysmallmanmarriedtoaverylargewife,Olga,buthe cherishedanidealisticenthusiasmfortheSovietUnion. InMarch1940,MoscoworderedAnatoliGourevitch–‘MonsieurKent’–totravelfromBrussels toGenevatohandoveranewcodeto‘Dora’–Radó.Thiswasabreachofeveryruleofespionage, barringcontactandthustheriskofcontaminationbetweennetworks,buttheGRUmanwaspleasedto begivensuchanopportunitytospreadhiswings.Asasupposedrichyoung‘Uruguayantourist’, VincenteSierracommissionedThomasCooktomakehisarrangements,andtookafatbookof travellers’chequestosupporthiscover.OnthetrainfromParistoGeneva,amanwholooked familiartooktheseatoppositehim.Gourevitchwasamazedwhenhiscompanionintroducedhimself asJeanGabin,greatestFrenchfilmstaroftheage,onhiswaytoGenevatoseehissonmakehis debutasacircusperformer.Thetwoexchangedvisitingcards.TheenchantedyoungRussiandecided thatbeingasecretagenthadmanycompensations. InstalledinGeneva’sHôtelRussie,hedividedhistimebetweentourism,nightclubvisitstosupport hiscover,andacautiousreconnaissanceof113,RuedeLausanne,theaddressCentrehadgivenhim forRadó.HecalledtheHungarian’snumberfromatelephonebox,thenwenttoacinemaandleftin themiddleofthefilm,towalktoRadó’shouse.Hewaswelcomedwarmly,butwithsurprise, accordingtoGourevitch.ThevisitorlaterclaimedthathehadbeenbemusedbyRadó’s‘carelessair ’, andbytheagent’sclaimthat,despitethedepredationsinflictedbywar,hestillhadsomemoney becausehismapbusinesswasnotdoingbadly.RadóintroducedhiswifeLena,thenthetwomen closetedthemselvesinhisstudy.GourevitchhandedoveraFrenchnovelwhichprovidedthenewkey forcodingmessages.Overthecourseofthenextfewhourstheypractisedtheroutinerepeatedly,until bothweresatisfiedthatRadóhadmasteredit.Thentheyparted,agreeingtomeetagaininLausanne, whichwasconvenientlynearMontreux,wherethe‘Uruguayantourist’hadbookedastayofseveral days.Followingthissecondmeetingtheylunchedtogetherinarestaurant,thenwanderedthestreets. MostRussiansabroadsufferedseverelyfromhomesickness.WhenSovietagentsmetandhad leisureenoughtogossip,thefirstquestiontoamanorwomanfreshfromMoscowwasalmost always‘Whatnewsfrom“thevillage”?’,astheycalledtheirowncountry.ThoughRadówas Hungarian,accordingtoGourevitchtheytalkedindiscreetlyabouteachother ’sexperiencesofCentre. RadóallegedlybeggedhiscontacttoemphasisetoMoscowtheloftynatureofhissourcesinBerlin. TheGenevaagentalsotoldhimtheGermanswereplanningtoattacktheSovietUnion.Yetitis implausiblethatinApril1940RadóshouldhavesaidGermanywaspreparingtoinvadeRussia, becauseatthattimeHitlerhadmadenosuchdecision,norevencomeneartoit.Whatseemscertain, however,isthatCentrewasrashinsendingGourevitchtoGeneva,andthatitsspiestoldeachother thingstheyshouldnothavedone,dangeroustobothnetworks. AttheendofDecember1940UrsulaHamburgerleftSwitzerlandforEngland,whereherGerman communistbrotherwasalreadylivinginexile.ShewassoonfollowedbyherhusbandLenBrewer. Herset–a‘musicalbox’intheirjargon,justasaforgerwasa‘cobbler ’andpolice‘thedoctor ’– wastakentoGeneva.AlexanderFootemovedbacktoLausannewithhisowntransmitter.Itwastoo dangeroustoinstallanexternalaerialonhisapartmentbuilding.Instead,hepersuadedanearby wirelessshoptosupplythedeficiency,sayingthathewantedtolistentotheBBC.Formonths, however,heprovedunabletoraiseMoscow.DespitepassingcountlesshourshunchedoveraMorse keyinthekitchen,hisurgentpulsesvanishedintoavoid.Thenon12March1941camean electrifyingmoment:intohisearphonesflickeredaresponse‘NDA,NDA,OK,QRK5.’Hewasin touchwithCentre. SwissintelligencemusthavebeenawareoftheRadógroup’stransmissions,butatthatstagethey madenoattempttointerfere,evenwhentheGestapoprotestedfiercelytoBernaboutthefloodof signalsitsoperatorsmonitoredfromacrosstheborder.Thespiesnowboastedathirdtransmitter: RadóhadmetayoungwomannamedMargritBolli,daughterofstronglysocialisticparents,who saidthatshewaseagertohelpthecommunistcause.TheRingtrainedthetwenty-three-year-oldgirl inMorsetechnique.InitiallyshetransmittedfromthefamilyhomeinBasle,butwhenherparentsnot unreasonablybaulked,shemovedtoGeneva.TheGestapo,listeninginfrustrationtothesignals–still unintelligibletothem–floodingacrosstheetherfromBolli,FooteandtheHamelschristenedthem ‘DieRoteDrei’–‘TheRedTrio’. WhowasgivingRadótheinformationfromGermanywhichwasforwardedtoMoscowinan averageoffivemessagesaday?Theactivitiesof‘Cissie’,RachelDübendorfer,hadnowbeen mergedintothoseofhisgroup.ColleaguesdescribedherasacharmlesswomanofBalkanorigins. ShelivedwithPaulBöttcher,aformerGermancommunistillegallyresidentinSwitzerland: DübendorfermorethanonceusedhernominalSwisshusband’sidentitydocumentstopreserve Böttcher ’sneck.Itisallegedthatoneofhersourcesprovidedanexplicitwarningof‘Barbarossa’. MeanwhileoneofRadó’smessages,dated21February1941,quotedaSwissintelligenceofficer, MayrvonBaldeggor‘Luise’,predictingaGermaninvasionattheendofMay,aforecastperhaps securedbytheSwissVikingintelligencenetworkinsideGermany,andendorsedbyaprominent Japanesediplomat.ThenetworkalsobecameaconduitthroughwhichsomeCzechintelligencewas passedtoMoscow,mostofitultimatelyderivedfromtheAbwehr ’sPaulThummel.AttheendofMay RadócitedaFrenchdiplomat,LouisSuss,predictinganinvasionon22June–thismessageprovoked anicyresponsefromMoscow.SodidanotherreporttothesameeffectfromRudolfRössler,who wouldhenceforwardbecometheforemostsourcefortheRadónetwork.Hiscodename‘Lucy’has passedintohistory,sincetheGRU’sSwissoperationbecamefamiliarlyknownasthe‘Lucy’Ring. Rössler,asmall,grey,bespectacledGermanémigrébornin1897,wasanimpregnablyenigmatic figure,ofakindthatpopulatesmanyspysagas.Asocialistjournalist,hefledfromtheNazisin1935 andsetupalittlepublishingbusinessinLucerne–thecitythatpromptedhiscodename.Hebegan writingunderthenameofR.A.Hermes,describingtheNazipersecutionofJewsandwarningthatthe NaziswouldreoccupytheRhineland.Berlinidentified‘Hermes’,andin1937deprivedRösslerofhis Germancitizenship.Henonethelessretainedmanyconnectionsinhishomeland,especiallywithinthe Wehrmacht.ShortofbothfriendsandcashinSwitzerland,hebegantoprovideinformationtoa privateintelligenceagencycalledBuroHa,basedattheVillaStutzsouthofLucerne,andrunbyan ardentanti-NazinamedCaptainHansHausamann.BuroHahadinformallinkstoSwissintelligence, whichforaseasonthereafterprovidedsomeprotectionforRössler. HesecuredasteadyflowofinformationfromGermany,andapportionedvaryingquotastoSwiss, British,CzechandSovietpurchasers.Thoughhisanti-Nazicredentialswerenotindoubt,hewas principallyandofnecessityamercenary–allhiscustomershadtopaycash.By1942hehadbecome byfartheGRU’smostimportantSwisssource,thekeyfigureintheRadónetwork.MoscowCentre, mistrustfulofthisshadowyfigure,insistentlydemandedthatRadóshouldmakeRössleridentifyhis sources,andthejournalistequallystubbornlyrefusedtodoso.Forallhislaterimportance,itremains unclearhowmuchintelligenceheprovidedin1941.Rösslerwenttohispost-wargravestillsilent abouttheidentityoftheGermanswhohadprovidedhimwithuseful,evensensationalmaterial. SubsequentspeculationhasfocusedonCol.HansOster,deputyheadoftheAbwehr;HansGisevius; formerLeipzigmayorGördeler;andtwounnamedWehrmachtgenerals. UncertaintyalsopersistsaboutthetimingandwordingofsomeoftheSwissRing’smessagesand theirsupposedwarningstoMoscow,bothbeforeandafter‘Barbarossa’.Allthatcanconfidentlybe saidisthattheGRUreceivedastreamofmessagesfromSwitzerlandinthespringof1941,someof whichstronglyindicatedthatHitlerintendedtoattackRussia.Equallysignificantforthestrategic debateinMoscow,CentrelearnedthatRudolfRösslerhadbeen,andprobablycontinuedtobe,an informantofMI6’sBernstation.Itwasonlyonestepfromthisknowledgetoabeliefinsidethe Kremlinthatthe‘Lucy’RinghadbecomeaninstrumentofChurchill,peddlingfalseinformationto dragRussiaintothewar. 2 S O R GE’ S WA R NI NGS Stalin’sJapanesesourcestoldmuchthesamestoryashisSwissones,thoughsincetheoutbreakof warinEuropethestrainofsustainingtwinlives,occupyingamuchhigherprofilethanthe‘Lucy’ spies,hadexactedaneverworseningtollonitsprincipalagent.RichardSorgestrovetousehis influencetodissuadetheGermansfromwarwithRussia.HetoldtheTokyoembassythatNomonhan –thesummer1939Russo–Japaneseborderclashes–hadbeenadisasterfortheJapanese,andthat BerlinshouldnoticetheeffectivenessoftheRedArmyandofZhukov,itslocalcommander.Then camethehugeshockoftheNazi–SovietPact,whichstunnedtheJapanesegovernment. AndSorge.Thespyreportedon12August1939themovementoftwelveJapanesedivisionsto KoreaandManchuria–therealtotalwastwenty–incasethegovernmentdecidedonwar,buthe expressedhisownconvictionthatJapanwouldholdback,andindeedon4SeptemberTokyoformally announcedapolicyofnon-intervention.SorgetoldMoscow,onHotsumiOzaki’sauthority,thatthe countrywouldenterthewaronlywhenitwasconfidentthatithadidentifiedthewinner.Headdedthat theGermanembassyexpectedtheJapanesetoremainneutral,andwasevennervoustheymightjoin theAlliedcamp. Sorge’ssurrealrelationshipwithCol.Ott’smissiontookanewtwistwhenhewasofferedastaff postasitspressattaché.Hedeclined,asusualbecausehewasfearfulofthesecuritychecksintohis pastthatacceptancewouldhaveprovoked,butheworkedfourhoursadayintheembassybuilding, whileassuminganewjournalisticroleasastringerforFrankfurterZeitung.Itwasscarcely surprisingthatinOctobertheJapanesepoliceforeignsection,theTokko,committedanagent– twenty-eight-year-oldHarutsuguSaito–toshadowSorge.Theysuspectedthathewasspying…for Germany.SaitonoticedMaxClausenandbegantotakeaninterestinhim,too. Duringthemonthsthatfollowed,stressesonthenetworkintensified.BrankodeVoukelitch disclosedhisworkfortheSovietstohisadoredJapaneseloverYoshiko.In1940thecouplewere married,andsheneverbetrayedhim,buthisindiscretionwasappallinglyrisky.MaxClausenbecame grosslyoverweight,andhishealthdeteriorated.Bedriddenforsometime,hehadtogethiswifeAnna toassemblethetransmitterbeforetappingoutmessagestoMoscowfromhissickroom.His employerswereunsympathetic.ClausenwasperemptorilyinformedbytheFourthDepartmentthat fundingwastight:paywasbeingreduced.Hislittleblueprintreproductioncompanyemployed fourteenpeople,hadopenedabranchinMukdenandwasfulfillingassignmentsfortheJapaneseWar andNavyMinistries.Moscowsaidthathemusthenceforthsubsidisehimselfoutofitsprofits.Ina farcicaltwist,ClausenbecameincreasinglyadmiringofHitler–whowas,afterall,nowsupposedly Stalin’sfriend. Buttheradiomankeptsending:in1940hetransmittedsixtytimes,sending29,179wordsofSorge’s wisdom.Prominentamongthespy’sscoopswasthedraftofaproposedJapan–Chinapeacetreaty.It wasdeemedavitalSovietinteresttokeeptheChinawargoing,becauseitsterminationwouldfreethe JapanesearmytostrikeatRussia.Whenthetreatyleakedandthedraftwastornup,Sorgewasalso abletosupplythesubstituteversion–thoughthis,too,remainedunsigned.FromtheGermanembassy hesecureddataontheMitsubishiandNakajimaaircraftfactories.Heprovidedaccurateforecastson Japan’saggressiveintentionstowardsFrenchIndochina.Hewasnotinfallible,however,andgave Moscowsomecauseforscepticism.Hepredicted,forinstance,thattheBritishwouldrejectTokyo’s demandforclosureoftheBurmaRoadsupplyroutetoChinashortlybeforetheydidsoforthree months.Asissooftenthecasewithintelligence,Sorge’soriginalreportwasnotmistaken:Churchill simplychangedhismind. Bytheendof1940,Sorge’sstandingwashigherinBerlinthanintheKremlin.Indeed,the excellenceofhisreportsfortheNazisalmostcausedhisundoing:SchellenbergoftheRSHArana securitycheckwhichrevealedhiscommunistpast.TheGestapo’sJosephMeisingerwaspostedto Tokyoasembassysecurityofficer,withorderstolookcloselyatSorge,thoughasyettheNazishad nosuspicionofhissupremeduplicity.Meisingerwasill-equippedforhistask:acreatureofReinhard Heydrich,hewasathugwhosereputationresteduponafewmonthsoforchestratingbrutalityin Warsaw.Muchmoreseriousforthespyringwasthefactthatsomeofitsprincipalmemberswere breakingdown.ThoughSorgesustainedhisjournalisticcareer,penningfifty-onearticlesfor FrankfurterZeitunginthefirstsixmonthsof1941,hisnerveswereshredded.Hisdrinkingworsened, andHanakofoundhimanincreasinglyviolentlover.Whenshesobbedandbeggedhimtoexplain himself,herespondedsullenly,‘Iamlonely.’Shesaid,‘Howcanthisbe,whenyouhavesomany GermanfriendshereinTokyo?’Hemuttered,‘Theyarenotmytruefriends.’InaSeptember1940 signaltoMoscow,hesaidthathewasforty-fouryearsoldanddesperatelytired.Heyearnedtobe allowedtogo‘home’toRussia,thoughhemusthaveknownthatCentrewouldnevercountenancethis untilthewarended. MaxClausenbecametoosicktokeeppacewithtransmissionofSorge’sfloodofmaterial,and begansecretlytodestroyunsentasubstantialproportion,arbitrarilyselected.Thus,whileitisknown whatinformationSorgeclaimedtohavepassedontotheFourthDepartment,itisunclearwhat actuallyreachedthemin1941:Russianreleasesofsomeofhismaterialinthe1990smustbetreated withcaution,becauseselective.Fromtheendof1940onwards,Sorgewaspersonallyconvincedthat GermanyandtheSovietUnionwouldgotowar.Hewasdeeplytroubledbytheprospect,andbyits implicationsforhimself.Duringtheearlymonthsof1941hereportedanincreasingJapanesefocus ona‘Strikesouth’strategyagainsttheEuropeanAsianempires.On10MarchhewroteofGerman pressureonJapan‘toinvigorateherroleintheTripartitePact’byattackingtheSovietUnion.But Sorgeaddedthatthiswarwouldonlystart‘oncethepresentoneisover ’. InMayheassertedthatHitlerwasresolved‘tocrushtheSovietUnionandkeeptheEuropeanparts …inhishands’,butsuggestedthattherewasstillscopefordiplomacytopreventwar.Laterthat monthhesaidthathisGermancontactsexpectedaninvasiontobelaunchedbeforeJune,butthen addedthatsomeimportantvisitorsfromBerlinbelievedthattheprospectofsuchactiontakingplace in1941hadreceded.BoththesesignalsprobablyreflectedSorge’sconversationswithLt.Col.Schol, aWehrmachtofficerpassingthroughTokyoenroutetotakingupthepostofmilitaryattachéin Bangkok.On30Mayhewirelessed:‘BerlinhasinformedAmbassadorOttthattheGermanoffensive againsttheUSSRwillbegininthesecondhalfofJune.Ottis95percentsurethatthewarwillbegin. TheindirectproofsthatIseeatthepresentareasfollows:TheLuftwaffetechnicaldelegationin [Tokyo]hasbeenorderedhome.Otthasrequestedthemilitaryattachétohaltthetransmissionof importantdocumentsviatheUSSR.TheshipmentofrubberviatheUSSRhasbeenreducedtoa minimum.’ Sorge’sreportswereasgoodasanygovernmentatanymomentinhistorycouldaskfromasecret agent,buthewasoneamongmanyvoicesthatcriedinthewildernesssurroundingtheKremlin.Stalin wasnomorewillingtotrustthewordofhisTokyomanthanthatofanyothersource.Heonce describedSorge,aboutwhomhehadbeenbriefed,as‘alyingshitwhohassethimselfupwithsome smallfactoriesandbrothelsinJapan’.AlthoughtheSovietwarlordwasnotoriouslywrongabout ‘Barbarossa’,fewnationalleadershavelostempiresbydecliningtoaccepttheunsupportedwordof secretagents.Historianscarvespies’coupsinlettersofgold,butseldomdetailthevastlylarger volumeofhumintthathasbeenpartiallyorwhollymisleading.Molotovsaidinoldage:‘Ithinkthat onecannevertrusttheintelligence…Theintelligencepeoplecanleadtodangeroussituationsthatit isimpossibletogetoutof.Therewereendlessprovocateursonbothsides…Peoplearesonaïveand gullible,indulgingthemselvesandquotingmemoirs:spiessaidsoandso,defectorscrossedthelines …’StalinwouldhavebeenmorelikelytobelieveSorgehadthespyreportedthattheGermans’ posturingsformedpartofaplotconcoctedbythefarawayBritish. 3 TH E O R C H ES TR A P LAYS ThemostauthoritativeintelligencesenttoMoscowinadvanceof‘Barbarossa’camefromthe Russians’Berlinnetworks.WhatbecameknownastheRoteKapelle–theRedOrchestra–wasnota singleentity,thoughsupposedtobesuchbytheGermans.ItwasaclusterofseparateGRUandNKVD networks,whichonlycarelesstradecraftandoperationalemergenciescausedtobecomeentwined. TheRoteKapellewaslessimportantforitsimpactonthewar,whichprovedslight,thanforthefact ofitsexistence.TheWesternAlliessecuredextraordinarymilitaryintelligencethroughUltra,but neverhadhumintsourcesofanysignificanceinsideGermany–unlessweincludeaproductof Purple,describedlater–untilsomemembersoftheanti-HitlerResistancecontactedAllenDullesof theOSSin1943.TheRussians,bycontrast,controlledashafttoagoldmine. TheHarnack/Schulze-BoysennetworksuppliedMoscowwithinformationfromanever-widening circlehostiletotheNaziregime.Althoughtheythemselveswerepeopleoftheleft,theyappearto haveforgedlinkswithsomeconservativeResistancefiguressuchasDietrichBonhöffer,andalsoto havehadcontactwiththeWhiteRosegroupinMunich.Giventhenumberofinformantsinvolved, andtheirrecklessinsoucianceaboutsecurity,thegroup’ssurvivaluntil1942wasareflectionof AbwehrandGestapoblindnessratherthanoftheRoteKapelle’sguile.ArvidHarnackwasso passionateinhiscommitmenttothecausethatheinvolvedhisgroupinprintinganti-Nazipamphlets andevenactedpersonallyasawatcherwhileothergroupmemberspastedwallpostersbynight.Such grandstandingwascourageous,butendangeredhismuchmoreimportantintelligencework. Throughoutthefirsttwenty-twomonthsofthewar,whiletheBritishstrovetopiercethefog obscuringtheirviewoftheContinent,theRussianswereabletocontinuespyingalmostunimpeded. Asneutrals,theychannelledtoMoscowthroughtheirdiplomaticmissionsagentreportsfromall overtheworld,withoutneedforusinghazardouswirelesslinks.InBerlin,theGestapo’sWilly LehmannhadlanguishedsinceMoscowshutdowncontacttohiminthewakeofthe1939Nazi–Soviet Pact.Lehmannwasaloner,andhisself-purposehadcometorevolvearoundhisintelligence activitiesfortheRussians.Whyhadtheyabandonedhim?InSeptember1940,seasonoftheBattleof Britain,heriskedslippingaletterintotheSovietembassymailbox,addressedto‘themilitaryattaché orhisdeputy’.Init,‘Breitenbach’pleadedforaresumptionofrelations.Hesaidthatunlesshecould servetheNKVDoncemore,‘myworkattheGestapowillbecomepointless’,andprovideda passwordfortelephonecontact. Thisletter,andthequestionofwhethertoreactivateLehmann,werereferredtoMoscow. DraconianinstructionsfromtheKremlindecreedthattheBerlinNKVDshouldneitheroffernor respondtoanyprovocationthatmighthelptojustifyGermanaggression.Nonetheless,afteradebate Centredispatchedanableyoungofficer,AlexanderKorotkov,codename‘Stepanov’,tobecome deputystationchief.HecontactedLehmann,andreportedbackafteralongmeeting:themanseemed sincerelydesperatetoreopenhislinetoCentre.On9September1940,apersonalorderfromBeria reachedBerlin:‘Nospecialassignmentsshouldbegivento“Breitenbach”.[But]youshouldacceptall materialthatfallswithinhisdirectsphereofknowledge,andalsoanyinformationhecanofferabout theoperationsofvarious[German]intelligenceservicesagainsttheUSSR.’‘Breitenbach’s’ extravagantenthusiasmkeptaliveBeria’ssuspicionthathewasaGestapoplant,testingthesincerity oftheKremlin’scommitmenttotheNazi–SovietPact.Hencethesecuritychiefemphasisedthatthe Berlininformantshouldbepressedtoprovidedocumentaryevidenceforeveryassertionhemade.So impoverishedwastheNKVD’sstaffinthewakeofthePurgesthatacompletenovicewasdispatched toactasLehmann’scourier:BorisZhuravlevscarcelyspokeanyGerman,andafterarrivingin Berlinhisfirststepwastohirealanguagetutor.Theyoungmanalsoboughtabicycle,inorderto startlearninghiswayaroundthecity.Fromtheoutsethewasalmostoverwhelmedbytheflowof documentsLehmanndeliveredateveningmeetings,whichhadtobecopiedovernight,thenreturned beforetheinformantsetoffforhisoffice. On20September1940,forinstance,theGestapomanwarnedMoscowthattheAbwehrwas planningahoneytrapforSovietmilitaryattachéNikolaiShornyakov,usingasingerfromtheRioRitabarnamedElisabethHolland,anAustrianfriendoftheattaché’slandlady.Breitenbachgavea detaileddescriptionoftheAbwehrcaseofficer,SiegfriedMuller:tall,blue-eyed,blackhair,small moustache,sunkencheeks,piercingstare,withbigearsandathinneck.Mullerwasrashenoughto seektopasshimselfoffasamemberoftheGestapo.Whenthiswasbroughttotheattentionof ReinhardHeydrich,Himmler ’sdeputydispatchedastingingrebuketoAdmiralCanarisforallowing theAbwehrmantoflyfalsecolours. MeanwhileAlexanderKorotkovwasalsochargedbyMoscowtoreopencontactwiththe Harnack/Schulze-Boysengroups.Toachievethis,inmid-Septemberheriskedrepeatedlycallingon Harnackathishome.OnseveraloccasionshewasinformedbyahousekeeperthatHerrHarnackwas out.Onlyonthe16thdidKorotkovatlastmeethisman.Theirinterviewwasinitiallytense,for Harnackwaswary.Whenatlasthewasconvincedofhisvisitor ’sbonafides–ifthatisnota contradictorytermforanNKVDofficer–hehadplentytosayabouthisownrangeofcontacts.Most significantly,hetoldtheRussianthatheandhisfriendswereconvincedthatHitlerintendedtoinvade theSovietUnioninthefollowingyear,1941.Backattheembassy,KorotkovmessagedLt.Gen.Pavel Fitin,headoftheforeignsectionoftheNKVDinMoscow,underthesignatureofhisnominalboss, AmayakKobulov,‘Zakhar ’: Topsecret TocomradeViktor ‘Corporal’haslearnedfrom‘Albanian’whohasspokentoatopWehrmachtofficer,thatGermanyintendstoinitiateawaragainst theSovietUnionearlynextyear… 16September1940 Zakhar YetMoscowhadreasontobescepticalaboutthesesensationaltidings.Historyshowsthattheywere correct,buton16September1940Hitlerhadnotyetcommittedhimself.AninvasionofRussiawas beingfeverishlydebatedbyprominentNazisandthearmyhighcommand.ButOperation ‘Barbarossa’remainedacontroversialoptionratherthanasettleddecision.ThefactthatArvid Harnack’spredictionwasultimatelyfulfilleddoesnotaltertheimportantfactthatitremained speculativeatamomentwhenheasserteditsfinality,asdidtheearlierreportofthe‘Lucy’Ring’s AlexanderRadó.OnlyinNovemberdidHitlerdecide. TheaffairsoftheBerlinNKVDweremuchcomplicatedbythefactthatKorotkov,theirbestman, washatedandresentedbyhisstationchief.TheCzechFrantišekMoravec,whohadextensivedealings withtheRussiansbeforethewar,hastestifiedtothebrutishpersonalitiesofmostoftheirintelligence officers.Onesuch,AmayakKobulov,nowrantheNKVD’sBerlinstation,whereheproveda blunderermoreineptthanMI6’sBestandStevens.Kobulov’sonlyclaimonrankwasaslavish devotiontothePartyhierarchy.BornintoafamilyofArmeniansmalltradersinTbilisi,heworkedas abookkeeperbeforejoiningthesecurityforcesin1927.Heowedhissurvival,andindeedrapid advancement,tohiselderbrotherBogdan,anintimateofBeria.Kobulovservedasanotoriously murderousdeputycommissarforUkraine,andwasthenappointedtoBerlindespitenotspeakinga wordofGerman.Onarrival,hetoldhisstaffthatherequiredtheirabsolutesubservience.Whena youngintelligenceofficerprotestedaboutbeingobligedtoserveasthechief’sdomesticvaletrather thantorunagents,hisbossthreatenedtodispatchhimtorotinthedungeonsoftheLubyanka. KobulovalsotookviolentexceptiontoKorotkov,andseizedanexcusetoreturnhimtoMoscow withahighlyadversepersonalreport.Beria,receivingthis,summarilysackedtheyoungofficerin January1941.Hesoonretractedthisdecision,butforsomemonthsKorotkovwasconfinedtodesk workintheLubyanka.MeanwhileKobulovarrangedapersonalmeetingwithHarnack.This encounterwentunnoticedbytheGestapo,butcouldeasilyhavebeenfataltothenetwork.Attheturn oftheyear,CentreacknowledgedthatonlyKorotkovwascompetenttohandleliaisonwithitsBerlin informants.HewassentbacktoGermany,withanewbrieftopassontoHarnack.TheNKVDwanted theGermaninformant’sgrouptoconcentrateoneconomics,notstrategy.TheNKVDFifth Department’sordersinstructedKorotkovtoexploretheextentoftheGermandomesticopposition, andhowfaritmightbeexploited.NothingwassaidaboutprobingGermany’smilitaryintentions towardstheSovietUnion–fromresidualcautionlestHarnackproveaGestapoplant,orfindhimself undertorture. Theorderwasendorsedinredpencil:‘ApprovedbythePeople’sCommissar.[Pavel]Sudoplatov. 26.12.40.’Korotkovcounter-signedthelastpage:‘Read,learnedandreceivedasanorder. “Stepanov”,26.12.40.’HedulypassedonthemessagetotheBerlingroup,bypassingKobulov,his nominalchief.Throughthemonthsthatfollowed,theGermansdeliveredasteadyflowof intelligence.On29January1941,HarnackreportedthattheEconomicsMinistryhadbeenorderedto compileindustrialtargetingmapsoftheUSSR,similartothosewhichhadbeenmadebeforetheBlitz onBritain.HetoldMoscowthattheheadoftheRussianDepartmentinBerlin’sBureauforForeign LiteraryExchangeshadbeenwarnedforpossibledutyasamilitarytranslatorandinterpreter;and thattheRussianDepartmentoftheEconomicsMinistrywascomplainingbitterlyaboutshortfallsin promiseddeliveriesofcommoditiesfromtheUSSR,underthetermsoftheNazi–SovietPact. HarnackmadeexplicithisownconvictionthatHitlerwaspreparingtoinvadeRussia.Healso providedcopiousdetailsonGermany’seconomicsituation–coal,ironandsteelproduction; syntheticrubberconsumption;industrialmanpowerdifficulties,togetherwithGermanplanstomake thesegoodbyrecruitingworkersfromoccupiedEurope–informationMI6wouldhavegivenrubies toaccess.Harnackconcluded,intermsthatweakenedhiscredibilityinMoscow,byrevertingto gossip:‘AccordingtoHitler ’scircle,heisnowinaveryunbalancedstate,suddenlyrunstowatcha filmduringthenight,or–ashashappenedmorethanonce,toredownthecurtainsinafitoffury.’ TheNKVD’sBerlinstationreportedtoMoscowon26February1941: TopSecret ToComradeViktor AccordingtoinformationthatHarnackobtainedfromErnstvonArnim,[DrKarl]Gördeler’s[anti-Hitleropposition]grouphasmade anattempttoachieveanagreementwiththearmyleadershiptoformanewGermangovernment…Thenegotiationshadanegative resultduetothenegativereactionfromthemilitaryleadership.However,accordingtoErnst,sometopgeneralssympathisewith Gördeler’splan… Zakhar TheBerlinstationwasnotaloneindispatchingwarningstoMoscowabouttheinvasionthreat:on7 February1941theNKVD’sThirdDepartmentciteditssource‘Teffi’inAnkaraasdiscussing ‘rumoursaboutapossibleGermanoffensiveagainsttheUSSR.Accordingtooneversionthiswill onlyhappenaftertheGermansdefeatEngland.Accordingtoanotherversion,whichisregardedas moreprobable,GermanywillattacktheUSSRbeforestrikingatEnglandinordertosecureits supplies.’NextdaycameanotherreportfromHarnack,declaringawidespreadbeliefatOKW headquartersthatfullGermanoccupationofRomaniawouldbecomeapreliminarytoaninvasionof theUSSR.ThiswasfollowedbyafurthermessageearlyinMarch,claimingthattheworseningfood situationinGermanywasintensifyingthepressureontheNazileadershiptoattackRussia.Col.Gen. FranzHalder,saidtheBerlininformants,wasplanningalightningstrikesimilartothe1940French campaigntooccupyUkraine,beforetheWehrmachtdrovesouthtoseizeStalin’soilfields.Harnack alsodescribedconcernsinhighplacesthatGermany,insteadofprofitingeconomicallyfrom invadingRussia,wouldfindsuchawardraining.Inanotherreportafewdayslater,hedescribed intensiveLuftwaffeaerialreconnaissanceactivityoverRussia,andoperationalplanningforan offensivethatwouldreachtheUralsinforty-fivedays. Merkulov,Beria’sdeputy,readthe11MarchreportfromBerlin.LikeallSovietofficialswho wishedtosurvive,hewassupremelycautious.Bornin1895,hehadworkedwithBeriainthetransCaucasianregion,androseyappingathisheelsthroughtheSoviethierarchy;hismostrecenttriumph hadbeentopresideoverthemassacreof25,000PolishofficersatKatyn.Now,hedemandedofFitin, ‘Aren’tthereothersourcesonthisexceptHarnack?Howcanwechecktheinformationwithoutletting anyinformantsknowwhatitis?Thetaskshouldbepresentedtotheminageneralandcautiousform.’ TheMarchreportsfromHarnackwerecorrect,thoughMoscowCentrealsoreceivedplentyof nonsense.‘Breitenbach’reportedthattheBritishwerepreparingtounleashchemicalwarfareagainst Germany,andthattheGermansintendedtousepoisongasontheRussiansintheeventofwar. Schulze-Boysenclaimedthathe‘knowsforsure’thattheAmericanairforceattachéinMoscow‘isa Germanagent.HepassestotheGermanstheintelligencedatawhichhe,inturn,receivesfromhis contactsintheUSSR.’ On15MarchCentreincreasedtherisklevelforitsBerlininformantsbyorderingKorotkovto establishadirectlinkwithSchulze-Boysen,cuttingoutcouriers,soastohastenevaluationofhis reports.TheirfirstmeetingtookplaceinHarnack’sflat,whereSchulze-BoysengavetheRussiana momentaryfrightbyturningupinhisLuftwaffeuniform.‘Ididn’thavetimetochange,’heexplained. KorotkovreportedtoMoscow:‘Wetalkedexclusivelyabouttheinformationonanti-Sovietplansthat wasavailabletohim.Heisabsolutelyconsciousofthefactthatheisdealingwitharepresentativeof theSovietUnion[asdistinctfromtheComintern].Myimpressionisthatheishappytotellus everythingheknows.Heansweredourquestionswithoutequivocationoranyattempttoobfuscate. Moreover,itwasobviousthathehadpreparedforthismeeting,bywritingdownsomequestionsfor usonascrapofpaper…WehopetoestablishacloseconnectionwithSchulze-Boysen.However,at presentheisconfinedtobarracksandisonlyoccasionallyandunpredictablyfreetotravelintotown, oftenwhileitisstilllightandeveninhisuniform,ashappenedwhenImethim.Anyrendezvousmust beflexible.’ Ontheeveningof19April,inHarnack’sflatKorotkovmetAdamKuckhoff,awriterandtheatre director,whowaspromptlyrecruitedwiththecodename‘OldMan’.KorotkovmessagedMoscow abouthiminfranklycondescendingterms:‘Kuckhoffstrikesoneasaculturedandeducatedman whoseviewshavebeeninfluencedbyreadingtheworksofLenin.HestillkeepssomeofLenin’s worksandthinkshimselfacommunist.’InMoscowtheCominterncheckeditsfilesonKuckhoffand endorsedhiscredentials.TheytoldKorotkovthat‘OldMan’‘wasdeeplyaffectedbythegeneral crisisofthebourgeoiscultureandbecameclosetothe“unionofIntellectuals”’.Thewriternow becameaprominentmemberoftheHarnackgroup. TheinsistentthemeofallthereportingtoMoscowwasthatofloomingNazionslaught.On8May 1941‘Zakhar ’reported:‘rumoursaboutGermany’sattackontheSovietUnionareconstantly increasing…Warisgoingtobedeclaredinmid-May.’A.S.Panyushkin,whounusuallycombinedthe roleofSovietambassadortotheChinesegovernmentinChongqingwiththatofNKVDstationchief, reportedtoMoscowearlyinMaythatHitlerwasexpectedtoinvade.TheChinesemilitaryattachéin BerlineventoldtheRussiansoftheGermans’intendedaxesofadvance. TheNKVDteaminBerlinwasfortunatetoescapedisaster,livingthroughthisuniquelysensitive periodinRusso–Germanrelationswithanoafasitsstationchief.Kobulov’sfallfromgracebegan withadrunkenrowataMay1941embassybanquetforavisitingSovietdelegation:hepublicly slappedthefaceofthedeputytraderepresentative.Thisepisodepromptedtheambassadortodemand theNKVDofficer ’srecall.KobulovcounterattackedbyaskingBeriatobringhimhome;heclaimed todislikethefeudinginsidetheembassyasmuchastheBritishbombingofBerlin.Beriafeltobliged toreportthebanquetepisodetoStalinandMolotov,butrejectedthedemandforhisman’srecallin returnforKobulov’smaudlinpromiseoffuturegoodbehaviour;hewasorderedbyMoscowtorisk nofurtherpersonalcontactwithHarnack. TheNKVDmanattemptedtoredeemhimselfasaspymasterbyrecruitingasaninformanta Latvianjournalistcodenamed‘Lycéestudent’,who,heassuredMoscow,was‘mostreliable’.This man,OresteBerlings,wasalreadyontheGestapo’sbooksasagent‘Peter ’,adoubleofwhom Ribbentropsaidcomplacently,‘Wecanpumpwhateverinformationwewantintohim.’This foolishnesswouldhavebeentrivialhaditnottakenplaceinthelastweeksbeforetheGermans launched‘Barbarossa’,whenintelligencefromBerlinshouldhavebeenofcriticalimportanceto Sovietdecision-making.Kobulov’sblunderingcontributedtotheKremlin’sstubbornscepticism aboutNKVDreporting. On18April1941,heedlessofStalin’sinsistencethatnoclashwithGermanywasimminent, Russia’sintelligenceservicesformallyshiftedtoawarfooting:theGRUandNKVDwarnedtheir networksacrossEurope,andstrengthenedtheirstationsinSwitzerlandandBerlin.Buttheydidlittle toimprovethemanagementofinformantsinthefield,chieflybecauseexperiencedhandlerswerein suchshortsupply.Evenmoreserious,theyfailedtoprovideagentswithmeansoflong-range communications.Russian-builtwirelesseswereofpoorquality:NKVDcommunicationsimproved onlylaterinthewar,whentheLubyankasecuredAmericansets.Intheprotractedmeanwhile,contact betweenMoscowanditsoverseasagentsremainedprecarious.On1May1941theBerlinstation urgentlyrequestedtransmittersfortheHarnackgroup,incasecontactthroughtheembassywaslost. Harnackhimselfwasreluctanttoacceptsuchequipment;hesaidthatwhileheknewnothingabout wireless,hewasacutelyconsciousoftheubiquityoftheAbwehr ’sandGestapo’sdirection-finders. Eventually,however,heacquiescedinastepwhichmerelyreflectedthelogicofhisconvictions:that warwasimminent,andhewishedtocontinuetoworkagainstHitler.Afterseveralweeks’delay,in mid-Junehishandlerspresentedhimwithtwosets.ThefirstwasaportableD-6,witharangenot muchoverfivehundredmilesandbatterieswithtwohours’life.TheNKVDmanpromisedmore batteries,butthesewereneverforthcoming.Thesecondsetwasalittlemorepowerful,butrequired mainselectricity. Korotkovexplainedthatcodingprocedurewaseasy:thespiesneededonlyrememberthenumber 38745andthekeyword‘Schraube’.HeurgedHarnacktomakeKarlBehrenshissecondwirelessoperator,buttheGermanbaulked.Thiswasahugelyriskyassignment,hepointedout,andBehrens hadthreesmallchildren.Hewouldneverforgivehimselfifthemanwascaught,andpaidtheprice. BehrenswasanywayunderGestaposurveillance,havingprovidedfalsepapersforaJewishbrotherin-law.Asecondpossiblecandidate,KurtSchumacher,wascalledupformilitaryduty.Eventuallythe secondwirelesssetwasplacedinthehandsofamannamedHansKoppi,suggestedbySchulzeBoysen.Withinweeks,however,Hitler ’shostshadsweptacrossRussia,drivingtheSovietsmany milesback,beyondreachofBerlin’sfeeblesignals.ThesetsgiventoHarnackfellsilent.He continuedindustriouslytogatherintelligence,butlackedmeanstopassiton.Thisimpassepersisted throughthefirstfivemonthsoftheEasternwar. MeanwhileWillyLehmann’smaterialalsobegantoincludeevidenceofGermany’scommitmentto warwithRussia.On28Mayhetoldhishandlerthathehadbeenorderedforundisclosedreasonsto organiseatwenty-four-hourdutyrosterforhissection.Afewdayslaterhishealthcollapsed,andhe wasobligedtotakesickleave,fromwhichhereturnedonlyon19June.Whathethenlearnedinhis officecausedhimtodiscardtradecraftandcallanimmediatemeetingwithZhuravlev,hiscourier:the GestapohadbeenformallyinformedofanordertoinitiatemilitaryoperationsagainsttheSoviet Union.ThisreportwasimmediatelyforwardedtoMoscow,butitseemsunlikelythatBeriashowedit toStalinuntilthelasthoursbeforetheGermaninvasion. AnothersignificantNKVDGermansourcewasCaptainWalterMariaStennes,onceanenthusiastic NazistormtrooperandfriendofHitler.Stennes–‘Friend’inMoscowCentre’sbooks–hadsince experiencedadramaticchangeofheart,becominganardentfoeoftheregime.Havingsurviveda brieftermofimprisonment,hedepartedforChinawherehebecameChiangKai-shek’sairadviser andwasrecruitedbytheRussians.On9June1941,followingaconversationwithahigh-ranking Wehrmachtvisitor,heinformedVasilyZarubinthattheinvasionhadbeenplannedforMay,then postponed,andthatathree-monthcampaignwasnowscheduledtostarton20June.Zarubinalsotold MoscowthatStenneshadmetSorgeinShanghai,whohadheardthesamestory. Schulze-BoysenwrotetohisNKVDbosseson11June,warningtheRussiansto‘preparefora surpriseattack’.HeurgedMoscowtobombtheRomanianoilfieldsandrailjunctionsatKönigsberg, StettinandBerlin,aswellastolaunchathrustintoHungary,tocutoffGermanyfromtheBalkans. ThiswasanextraordinarystepforaGermanofficertotake,evenoneasdisaffectedfromhisown governmentasSchulze-Boysen–explicitlytourgeaforeignpowertobombhisowncountry.Butto suchapasshadmatterscome.Inall,betweenSeptember1940andJune1941,HarnackandSchulzeBoysenprovidedforty-tworeportswhichremainextant–andperhapsmorewhichhavebeenlostor neverreachedMoscow–offeringevermorecircumstantialdetailaboutHitler ’spreparationsand operationalplanning.Moreover,on20JuneaRomesourceinformedCentrethattheItalian ambassadorinBerlinhadsenthisForeignMinistryacodedtelegramreportingthattheGerman invasionoftheSovietUnionwouldstartbetween20and25June. 4 TH E D EA F M A N I NTH E K R EM LI N Thus,fromearly1941onwardsafloodofintelligencereachedMoscow,conveyingacommon message:Hitlerwasonthebrink,thoughthereweremanydivergencesofopinionaboutwhenhe wouldattack–unsurprising,sincetheWehrmacht’stimetablewasrepeatedlypushedbackby operationaldelays.Inthosedays,however,theSovietUnionwasbetterprotectedagainstitsown peoplethanagainstforeignfoes.Russia’sintelligencechiefswerepreoccupiedwithenemieswithin. TherewerefearsaboutrisingUkrainiannationalism.BeriareportedsubversiveactivitybyJewish andZionistorganisations–headvancedtheimplausibleclaimthatthesewereactingonbehalfofthe Nazis.Merkulovdescribedsuccessfulpurgesof‘anti-Sovietelements’intheBalticrepublics,with 14,467peoplearrestedand25,711exiledtoSiberia. ThemanchieflyresponsibleforanalysingincomingintelligencewasLt.Gen.PavelFitin,whohad headedtheforeignsectionoftheNKVDsince1939,whenheascendedtoofficeinthewakeofthe Purges.Hewasanunlikelyappointment,selectedforpoliticalreliability.AformerKomsomolleader andPartyofficial,hehadstudiedatMoscow’sagriculturalmechanisationschoolbeforeworkingfor someyearsatafarmingadviceservice.OnlythenwasheselectedtoattendSHON,theforeign intelligencetrainingschoolestablishedatBalashikha,fifteenmileseastofMoscow.Students–120in thefirstthreeyears,justfourofthemwomen–wereperfunctorilyintroducedtobourgeoisWestern living:teacherswithEuropeanexperiencelecturedthemondress,manners,‘goodtaste’.Trainees spentfourhoursadaystudyinglanguages,twoonintelligencetradecraft.Fitinwasalreadythirtyninein1938,whenhestartedworkattheNKVD.AvisitingAmerican,gazingathislongfairhairand blueeyeswhichconveyedanillusionofinnocence,suggestedthathelookedmorelikeacruise directorthanaspymaster.Althoughnofool,FitinwouldneverpresenttohissuperiorsMerkulov, BeriaandbeyondthemStalinanythinglikelytoincurtheiranger.Wheninmid-June1941anNKVD agentinHelsinkireportedlarge-scaleFinnishtroopmovements,anervousFitinscribbledtohis deputy,‘PleaseprocesscarefullyforHozyain’–‘theMaster ’,asStalinwasalwaysdescribed. Thelastlinkintheforeignintelligencechainbefore‘Barbarossa’wasWinstonChurchill.British perceptionsoftheSovietUnion,andofthepotentialoftheRedArmy,werecolouredbytheloathing ofmostsoldiers,diplomatsandTorypoliticiansforeverythingtodowiththebloodstained Bolsheviks.Moreover,theirexpectationsofGermanstrategyweredistortedbyanationalistic convictionthatHitlersawvictoryoverBritainashisforemostobjective.WhenSirVictorMallet, Britain’sambassadorinStockholm,reportedinMarchthat‘allmilitarycirclesinBerlinare convincedofconflictwithRussiathisspringandconsidersuccesscertain’,theForeignOffice dismissedhisdispatchasreflecting‘theusualcontradictoryrumours’.On24March1941,Stafford CrippscabledfromMoscow,reportinghisSwedishcounterpart’sinformation:‘Germanplanisas follows:theattackonEnglandwillbecontinuedwithU-boatsandfromtheair,buttherewillbeno invasion.AtthesametimeadriveagainstRussiawilltakeplace.Thisdrivewillbebythreelarge armies:thefirstbasedatWarsawundervonBock,thesecondbasedatKonigsberg,thethirdbasedat CracowunderList.’ TheJointIntelligenceCommitteerejectedthiswarning.InearlyApriltheJIC’sassessmentwasnot dissimilarfromthatofStalin:‘1.ThesereportsmaybeputoutbyGermansaspartofthewarof nerves2.GermaninvasionwouldprobablyresultinsuchchaosthroughoutSovietUnionthatthe Germanswouldhavetoreorganiseeverythingintheoccupiedterritoryandwouldmeanwhilelose supplieswhichtheyarenowdrawingfromtheSovietUnionatanyrateforalongtimetocome3. Germany’sresources,thoughimmense,wouldnotpermithertocontinuehercampaigninthe Balkans,tomaintainthepresentscaleofairattackagainstthiscountry,tocontinueheroffensive againstEgypt,andatthesametimetoinvade,occupyandreorganisealargepartoftheSovietUnion …5.TherehavebeenindicationsthatGermanGeneralStaffareopposedtowarontwofrontsandin favourofdisposingofGreatBritainbeforeattackingSovietUnion.’ Herewasamanifestationoftheforemostsininintelligenceanalysis:theJICreachedconclusions foundeduponBritishandnotNazilogic.Theprimeminister,however,hadlongnursedahunchthat HitlerwouldturnEast.On21AprilhedispatchedapersonalwarningtoStalin,inspiredbyCripps’s messageandsomeUltraindications.Thiswasreceivedwithderision.Maisky,theSovietambassador, tauntedBrendanBracken:‘SincewhendoesChurchilltendtotaketheinterestsoftheSovietUnionso closelytohisheart?’HetoldBracken,Churchill’sintimate,thatsuchmissivesfromLondonhad entirelytheoppositeeffecttothatwhichwasintended.Hedidnotaddavitalcorollary:that Whitehall’straitorshadbriefedtheKremlinabouttheJIC’sdisbeliefthatHitlerwouldinvade.Aslate as23May,theCommitteereportedthatanewagreementbetweenGermanyandRussiamightbe imminent.Foolishthoughsuchspeculationsoundstoday,itwasthenlessthantwoyearssincejust suchasatanicpacthadbeensigned.Ifthetwotyrantshadstruckabargainbefore,whyshouldtheynot dosoagain?NorwasMoscowtheonlyplacewhereChurchill’ssinceritywasquestioned.Bjorn Prytz,theSwedishambassadorinLondon,toldMaiskyhethoughtBritain’sprimeministerhadno ideahowtowinthewar,savebytryingtodragtheRussiansin.CrippstoldtheAmericanambassador inMoscowthathecouldwellimaginetheBritishacquiescinginaGermaninvasionofRussia,if HitlermadeacompromisepeaceoffertoBritain. Wheninformedandinfluentialforeignersclungtosuchopinions,Stalin’scynicismaboutwar warningsfromChurchill,whomheknewtobedefyingtheviewsofhisownadvisers,becomesless baffling.InApril,HozyainorderedtheRedArmyandtheintelligenceservicestoignorebothalleged Germanmilitarypreparationsbeyondtheborder,andrepeatedLuftwaffeviolationsofSoviet airspace.AttheendofthemonthMerkulovsubmittedareportdesignedtosilencethe‘warmongers’ andtalkupprospectsforadiplomaticrapprochementwithBerlin.HesaidthatGermansuccessesin NorthAfricahadencouragedHitlertofinishoffBritainbeforeopeninganynewfront.Muchwas madeofthedissensionbetweenHitlerandhisgenerals,whichwasrealenough.TheNKVDalso suggested–atravestyofthetruth–thattheLuftwaffewasunwillingtofightRussiabecauseofthe RedAirForce’srecognisedsuperiority.Stalinbriefedhisintelligencechiefsthattheirfirstobjective wasnowdiplomatic:toclarifyHitler ’sdemands–thepricehewouldseektoextractfromMoscow forkeepingthepeace.TheyrespondedthatBerlinwaslikelytowantanincreasedflowofgrain,oil andothercommodities.VonderSchulenberg’sdiplomacyplayeditspartinfeedingStalin’s delusions:aslateasmid-May,theGermanambassadorurgedtheSovietdictatortowritetoHitler, exploringcommonground.MeanwhileRussia’sNeutralityPactwithJapan,signedon13April1941, representedasincereanddesperateSovietattempttoavertwarbetweenthetwocountries,andthusto reducetherangeofthreatsfacingtheSovietUnion.WhenforeignministerYōsukeMatsuokaleft Moscowbearingthesignedtreaty,inanalmostunprecedentedgestureStalinwenttothestationtosee himoff. SovietembassiesandintelligencestationsadheredrigidlytoordersfromMolotovandBeriato reportnothingwhichsuggestedtheinevitabilityofwar.On24May,whentheFinnishambassadorin IstanbulgavehisSovietcounterpartdetailsofGermanformationsdeployedontheSovietborder, Stalin’smanaskedcontemptuouslywhethertheFinnhadcountedthesoldiershimself.Aweeklater, TimoshenkoandZhukovweresummonedtotheKremlin,andarrivedexpectingorderstoputSoviet defencesonfullalert.InsteadtheywerehandedStalin’sacceptanceofatransparentlyfraudulent requestfromBerlinthatsquadsofGermansshouldbeallowedtoroaminsideRussia’sborderin searchof1914–18wardead.ThegeneralswereobligedtofumeinimpotencewhileHitler ’sscouts surveyedtheirchosenbattlefields,protectedbyspadesandHozyain’sorders. TheBritishgovernment’sclumsyhandlingofthe10MayparachutedescentonScotlandbyDeputy FührerRudolfHessconvertedwhatshouldhavebeenapropagandadisasterforHitlerintoamajor embarrassmentforhisenemy.ItpersuadedStalinthatboththeGermansandtheBritishweretoying withhim,whilepreparingtomakeaseparatepeacewitheachother.LordBeaverbrook,asupreme mischief-makerwhoseinterventionswereallthemoredamagingbecausehewasaknownintimateof Churchill,toldMaiskyinLondon,‘OfcourseHessisanemissaryofHitler.’Thepresslordclaimed, rightlyenough,thatHesssoughttopromoteacommonfrontagainstBolshevikbarbarism.Maisky deducedthatBritain’sfutureconductdependednot–ashehadhithertosupposed–onChurchillian resolution,butinsteadontheacceptabilityoftheGermantermsheassumedHesstohavebroughtwith himfromHitler. Inthelatespringof1941StalindailyexpectedtoreceivedetailsofanAnglo–Germancompromise peace,followedbyademandfromBerlinthatRussiashouldjointheAxisandaccelerateitseconomic supportforGermany.AslateasOctober1942StalinwrotetoMaisky:‘AllofusinMoscowhave gainedtheimpressionthatChurchillisaimingatthedefeatoftheUSSR,inorderthentocometo termswiththeGermanyofHitlerorBruningattheexpenseofourcountry.’Withbreathtaking hypocrisy,hechosetoforgetthatinthemoodofpanicthatovertooktheKremlinafter‘Barbarossa’ began,theNKVD’sPavelSudoplatovhadbeenorderedtopasstotheBulgarianambassador,for forwardingtoBerlin,asecretKremlinmessageinvitingacompromiseRusso–Germanpeace.Only becauseHitlerwasuninteresteddidthatapproachgonowhere.AtanOctober1944dinnerinthe KremlinStalincouldstillofferamockingbutatleastsemi-serioustoastto‘theBritishintelligence servicewhichhadinveigledHessintocomingtoEngland’. InJune1941theNKVDdraggedfromacellintheLubyankaCaptainAleksandrNelidov,an erstwhileAbwehrmaninWarsaw,toinvitehisopinionofHess’sflighttoBritain.Theoldsoldier respondedimmediately:‘Thismeanswar,withoutanydoubt.HessisrecruitingEnglandasanally againsttheUSSR…’Nelidov,bornin1893,wasaformertsaristgunnerofficerwhohadroamed Turkey,FranceandGermanyfollowingtheWhiteArmy’sdefeatinRussia’scivilwar.Hestruckup friendshipsintheGermangeneralstaff,andattendedseveraloftheir1930swargames.Earlyin1939 hewasfoolishenoughtoacceptfromCanarisanassignmenttoWarsaw,wherehewaspromptly seizedbythePoles.WhentheRussiansoverraneasternPolandandfoundhimlanguishinginLvov prison,asaknownNaziintelligenceagenthewasdispatchedtoMoscow. BythetimeZoyaRybkina,thetall,strikinglyattractivesenioroperationsofficeroftheGerman sectionoftheNKVD,washandedhisfileinmid-1940,Nelidovwasabrokenman.Rybkinawrote contemptuouslyinher1998memoirs:‘Hisbehaviourwasservile…Ifeltamusedbyhimbutalso ashamedofhim,asanofficeroftheoldschool.’Thewretchedcaptainwasrepeatedlysummoned fromhiscelltobequizzedabouttheWehrmachtthroughthedayandfarintothenight:‘Hislunchwas broughtfromourcanteen,andwhenhesawaknifeandforkforthefirsttime,hepushedthemaway andsaidinterrorisedtones:“ButIamnotsupposedtohavethese.”’ RybkinasetNelidovtoworkcomposinganarrativeoftheGermanwargameshehadattended, completewithmapsandorder-of-battledetails.HetoldtheNKVDofficerthattheGermanplanfor invadingRussiaassumedthatMinskwouldfallonthefifthday.Rybkinawrote:‘Iburstoutlaughing. “Howcome,onthefifthday?!”Hewasembarrassedandsworebyeverygodthatthiswaswhat[Gen. Wilhelm]Keitel[chiefofOKW]reckonedon.’ShepassedonthejoketoFitin,whosnarled,‘This bastardissuchaliar.Justthinkaboutit,Minskonthefifthday!’Golikov,theRedArmy’schiefof intelligence,laughedevenlouder:‘Sotheyhavedecidedtodrivewedgesforward.Andimagine– theyplantotakeMinskonthefifthday!Welldone,Keitel,youareastrongman,suchastrongman! …’ButNelidovalsotoldhisjailersthatGen.HansvonSeekt,thehoaryoldformerarmychiefof staff,predicteddisasterforaGermaninvasionoftheSovietUnion,becausethelogisticswere unsustainable. Doubtspersist,unlikelyevertoberesolved,astowhatpreciselytheRedArmyknewbefore ‘Barbarossa’.MarshalZhukovinsistedtotheendofhisdaysthathewaskeptinignoranceofmuchof theforeignintelligencethatwenttotheKremlin.IftheGermansinvaded,hehimselfexpectedthemto drivesouth-westwardstosecureUkraineanditsimmensenaturalresources,thoughhethought possibleanalternativeattackonanaxisRiga–Dvinsk.Sovietmilitaryattachés,especiallythoseinthe Balkans,provideddetailedandbroadlyaccurateinformationaboutGermandeployments.Russian frontier-watcherscontributedsubstantiallymorethantheNKVD’sorGRU’sforeignagentstothe Stavka’sgraspoftheWehrmacht’sorderofbattle.ByAprilZhukovrealisedtheimportanceofthe centralfrontinGermanplanning–largeforceswereconcentratedinEastPrussiaandPoland.But conflictingevidencereflectedcontinuingargumentsbetweenHitlerandhisgenerals. ItisoftenstatedthattheRedArmywaswhollysurprisedwhentheGermansattacked.Thisisless thantrue.Intheweeksbeforewar,despiteStalin’sscepticismheallowedlargeforcestobe redeployedintheWestandbroughttoarelativelyhighstateofreadiness.Thedisasterssubsequently sufferedbytheRussianswereoverwhelminglyattributabletotherottenconditionofthearmedforces andtheirleadership,ratherthantolackofimmediatepreparedness.Stalindeservesmostoftheblame forwhatbefelltheSovietUnionin1941,butsurprisewastheleastofthereasonsforcatastrophe.The RedArmywasoutfoughtbytheWehrmachtateverylevel,savethatsomeofitsunitsdisplayedan animalsacrificialcouragethatastonishedtheirfoes.Beforetheinvasion,on12MayZhukovhad movedintoforwardpositionsfourSovietarmies,800,000men.On2JuneBeriatoldStalinthatthe Germanswereatahighstateofreadinessalongtheentireborder.Onthe12thafurtherreporton GermandeploymentswenttoStalin,notingahighlevelofhostileintelligenceactivity:the Wehrmachthadsometwohundred‘line-crossers’scoutingintheSovietborderregion.Inresponse, Stalingrudginglyagreedthatwarreadinessshouldbereducedtotwohoursforrifledivisions,three formotorisedandartillerydivisions.Thisscarcelyconstitutedabsolutepassivityinthefaceofthe threat. BoththeRussiansandtheBritishwerenaïveenoughtoexpectanultimatumtoprecedehostilities. On11June,SirStaffordCrippsreturnedhome‘forconsultations’.Thepurposeofhisrecallwas exactlyasstated–toenabletheBritishgovernmenttodiscusswithhimthebewilderingand momentousdevelopmentsthatwereunfolding.LondonwasdismayedbyaGermanpropaganda campaign,designedtopersuadetheworldthatanewRusso–Germanrapprochementwasimminent. TheKremlinwasshockedbyCripps’sjourney,fortheoppositereason:Stalinassumedthatthe Britishwerepreparingsomebyzantinediplomaticstroke,whichwouldleavetheSovietUnion isolated.On16JuneMaiskywassummonedtoBritain’sForeignOfficeandgivenacoolrecitalofits latestintelligenceonGermandeployments,basedonUltra.TheWehrmachtwasthoughttohave eightydivisionsinPoland,thirtyinRomania,fiveinFinlandandnorthNorway,115inall.Thiswas littlemorethanhalfthereality,substantiallyfewerthantheGRUhadalreadyidentified.Itwasa reflectionofthelimitationsofUltrain1941,andoftheWarOffice’spooranalyticalcapabilityatthis stage,thattheygotthenumberssobadlywrong.ButevenformerscepticsontheJICnolonger doubtedtheoverarchingreality:HitlerwasabouttoinvadetheSovietUnion. InMoscow,theNKVDadoptedadesperatelast-minuteploy:itsoperativesinterceptedtwoGerman diplomaticcouriers,abouttoleaveMoscowforBerlinwiththeGermanembassy’sdispatches.One manwastrappedinahotellift,whiletheotherwaslockedinthebathroomofhissuite.Inthefive minutesbeforethelift-boundcourierwasfreed,theNKVDphotographedtheGermanambassador ’s correspondencebeforerestoringittoitsbriefcase.Thecontents,whenexaminedintheLubyanka, provedequivocal:SchulenbergreportedthathewasconfidentSovietintentionsremainedpeaceful. ButhealsostatedthathehadobeyedinstructionsfromBerlintoreducehisstafftoanabsolute minimum,anobviouspreliminarytowar. OnCripps’swaybackfromLondonhestoppedinStockholm,wherehetoldthedirectorofthe ForeignMinistryaboutrumoursofanewRusso–Germanagreement.Rubbish,saidtheSwede.His country’sintelligenceservicehadinterceptedorderstoGermanforcesinNorway,whichmadeplain thattheywouldattackbetween20and25June.TheSwedishambassadorinMoscow,doyenofthe diplomaticcommunity,reported:‘Theonlycertainthingisthatwefaceeitherabattleofglobal significancebetweentheThirdReichandtheSovietEmpireorthemostgiganticcaseofblackmailin worldhistory.’ZoyaRybkina,keyNKVDanalystofGermany,describedhowon17Juneshe preparedasituationreportforPavelFitintopresenttoStalin,basedchiefly,butnotentirely,onthe RedOrchestra’smessages–Sorge,ofcourse,reportedtotheGRU.Shelaterprofessedtohave concludedthatwarwasinevitable:‘AllofGermany’smilitarypreparationsforarmedaggressionare complete,andanattackcanbeexpectedatanytime.’Inreality,however,thedocumentwasmore equivocalthanitsdraftersafterwardstriedtoclaim.Tocoverthemselves,theyrepeatedlyusedsuch phrasesas‘Itisnotindicatedonwhatdatathesourcehasreachedhisconclusions…Harnackdoes notknowwhere,when,orinwhatconnectionHalderhadexpressedthispointofview…Harnack doesnottakeatfacevaluethestatementofGöring,andreferstohisnotoriousbragging.’Knowing thattheKremlinstillstubbornlyrejectedtheirownnear-certainty,theyfeltobligedtoassertdoubts theydidnothave. MerkulovandFitinwenttogethertotheKremlinatnoonon17June.Thelatter,whohadseldom metStalin,afterwardsacknowledgedhisowntrepidation,whichmightmorejustlybecalledterror. Thetwogrey,bleak,mercilessheroesofsomanystatekillingsagreedtheirlinebeforeentering Hozyain’spresence:theywoulddescribetheirownintelligenceassessmentasmerely‘likelytobe true’,ratherthancertain.TheyfoundStalincalm,pacingtheroomaswashiscustom.Fitinsawthe mostrecentdecryptfromBerlinlyingonhisdesk.‘Ihavereadyourreport,’murmuredStalininhis accustomedslow,understatedfashion.‘SoGermanyisgettingreadytoattacktheSovietUnion?’And hestaredatbothFitinandMerkulov. Theyhadnotbeenexpectinghimtoaddresstheissuesobaldly,andfeltlost.‘Weweresilent,’ recalledFitin.‘Onlythreedaysbefore,on14June,newspapershadpublishedtheTASSstatement sayingthatGermanywasstillunwaveringlyadheringtotheconditionsoftheSoviet-Germanpact.’ BothheandMerkulovpreservedthestone-facedsilencethatseemedtooffertheirmostplausiblepath tosurvival.StalinfiredastringofcontemptuousquestionsabouttheNKVD’ssources.Fitindescribed theSchulze-Boysen/Harnacknetworks,thenStalinsaid:‘Listen,intelligencechief,thereareno Germansthatcanbetrusted,exceptWilhelmPieck’–theComintern’ssecretary,nowexiledin Moscow.ThenfollowedasilencethatseemedtothevisitorsinterminablebeforeStalinoncemore lookedup,gazedhardatthemandbarked,‘Misinformation!Youmaygo.’Inanotherversionofthe conversation,heinstructedtheintelligencechiefstogobacktothesources,checktheirinformation andoncemorereviewtheNKVDassessment.WhatiscertainisthatStalinrejectedthewarwarning. Rybkinawrotelater:‘ItishardtodescribethestateofourteamwhileweawaitedFitin’sreturn fromtheKremlin.Hecalledtohisofficemeand[Pavel]Zhuravlev’–theveterandirectorofthe Germansection,muchadmiredbycolleagues.Fitintossedthestapleddocumentontothecoffeetable atwhichhistwosubordinatessat.‘I’vereportedtotheBoss,’hesaid.‘IosifVissarionovichstudied yourreportandthrewitbackatme.“Thisisbluff!”hesaidirritably.“Don’tstartpanic.Don’tdeal withnonsense.You’dbettergobackandgetaclearerpicture.”’Fitintoldthenonplussedintelligence officers:‘Checkthisonemoretimeandreporttome.’Oncealonetogether,Zhuravlevsaidto Rybkina,withtheparadeofconvictionindispensabletosurvivalintheSovietuniverse:‘Stalincansee furtherfromhisbell-tower.ApartfromourreportsheisbeingbriefedbytheGRU,ambassadors, trademissions,journalists.’Rybkinaprofessedtoagree,butadded:‘Thismeansthatouragents,who havebeentestedoveryears,mustbeconsidereduntrustworthy.’Zhuravlevshrugged,withauthentic Russianfatalism,‘Weshalllive,weshallsee.’Beria,ingrovellinganticipationofHozyain’swishes, orderedthatfortyNKVDofficerswhohadpassedonwarningsofwarshouldbe‘groundintolabour campdust’.HewrotetoStalinon21June:‘Iagaininsistonrecallingandpunishingourambassador toBerlin,Dekanozov,whokeepsbombardingmewith“reports”onHitler ’sallegedpreparationsto attacktheUSSR.Hehasreportedthatthisattackwillstarttomorrow…ButIandmypeople,Iosif Vissarionovich,havefirmlyembeddedinourmemoryyourwiseconclusion.Hitlerisnotgoingto attackusin1941.’ Muchinkhasbeenexpendedbyhistoriansonattemptstodeterminewhatproportionofthe intelligencegarneredbyRussia’ssecretservicesreachedtheKremlin,ratherthanremaininginthe deskdrawersofBeria,MerkulovandFitin.Thiscontroversyseemsspurious.Beyonddoubt,Stalin wasprovidedwithoverwhelmingevidenceabouttheGermanmilitarybuild-upontheSovietborder. TheHomericblunderlayinhisanalysisofitssignificance.PosterityderidesStalinforrejecting obvioustruth.ButhemerelychosetosharethestrategicviewheldbytheBritish,andespeciallytheir JointIntelligenceCommittee,withthesoleexceptionofChurchill,untilthelastdaysbefore ‘Barbarossa’.Thisseemsimportantincomprehendingthetyrant’sconduct.ThankstoWhitehall traitors,theKremlinknewthatBletchleyParkhadbeguntoreadGermanwirelesstrafficona substantialscale,whichincreasedStalin’sbeliefinLondon‘somniscience.Aperverselyexaggerated respectfortheskillofBritain’ssecretservicesandtheguileofitsdiplomacythuscausedhimto acceptWhitehall’sviewofHitler ’sintentionsinpreferencetothatofhisownmarvellousnetworksof spies.HecouldneverbelievethatChurchill’spersonaljudgementaboutHitler ’sintentiontoattack Russiawasbothhonestlyexpressed,andsuperiortothatofBritain’sintelligenceapparatus–untilthe JICchangeditsmind,thankstoUltra,justbeforeHitlerstruck. HerewasthemostremarkableaspectofKremlinbehaviourinadvanceoftheinvasion: ‘Barbarossa’didnotrepresentafailurebytheSovietintelligence-gatheringmachine.Fewmilitary operationsinhistoryhavebeensocomprehensivelyflagged.Therewas,instead,simplyahistoric misjudgementbytheheadofstate.Stalin’sdeafnessduringtheovertureto‘Barbarossa’emphasised theindissolubilityofthelinksbetweenintelligence,diplomacyandgovernance.Unlessallthreedid theirparts,eachonewasuseless. Intheearlyhoursof22June1941,theLubyankawasalmostsilent.TheNKVD’sheadsofdepartment customarilywenthomeat8p.m.,thoughneverwithoutanodfromBeriaorMerkulov.Pavel Sudoplatovwasamongthebuilding’sfewoccupantsabovecelllevelwhen,at3a.m.,thetelephone rang.ItwasMerkulov,whoannouncedthataGermaninvasionoftheSovietUnionhadbegun. Sudoplatovbeganhastilycallingstaffintothebuilding,includinghiswifeEmma,whohad abandonedoperationalworktobecomeanagenttrainer.LeonidEitingon,hisdeputy,almost invariablycrackedajokeortwoonarrivalintheoffice;butlikeeveryotherRussianthatfateful morninghefoundnothingtojustifybreachingthebuilding’smoodofstunnednear-paralysis. ThememoirsofSovietintelligenceofficerssometimesconveyanillusionthatlifewithinthe LubyankawaslittledifferentfromthatinBroadway,butglimpsesnonethelessbreakthroughofthe institutionalisedterror.TheWhiteRussianofficerAleksandrNelidov,oneofthosewhohadpredicted ‘Barbarossa’,wastoldnothingofitsoccurrenceuntilon22July1941hewasdraggedfromhiscell intotheofficeofZoyaRybkina.Hegrewwide-eyedwhenhefoundhersittingbehindblack-out curtainsamidthecrumpoffallingbombsandanti-aircraftfire.‘ZoyaIvanovna!’heexclaimed.‘They arefiringrealshells.Thisiswar!’Shenoddedandsaid,‘Todayisexactlyamonthsinceitstarted. AndMinskdidfall,notonthefifthdayasyousaidthattheGermanspredicted,butonthesixth…’A guardcamerunning,outofbreath,totakeNelidovbacktohissubterraneanquarters.Theoldtsarist saidgloomily,‘Farewell,ZoyaIvanovna.YoucantrustallthatIhavewrittenhere,inthisroom.’He crossedhimselfandbowedashedeparted,plainlyexpectingtobeshot. Twodayslater,however,hewasreturnedtoRybkina’soffice,abruptlyhandedasuitcaseofclothes toreplacehisprisonrags,andorderedtogointoanadjacentroomandchangeintothem.Theguard returnedafewminuteslaterandreportedthatNelidovwassittingsobbing,paralysedbyfear.The prisonerkeptaskingwhytheyneededtodresshimsosmartlybeforekillinghim.Rybkinamarched nextdoorandtoldthewretchedmantopullhimselftogether.‘Comeon,AleksandrSergeevich,how couldyouletyourselfgolikethis?Youneedtogetagrip.Iamtakingyoutomeetmybosses.’They proceededfirsttotheofficesofPavelZhuravlevandhisdeputyPavelSudoplatov,thenalltogether presentedthemselvesbeforePavelFitin.ThegeneralinvitedtheastoundedNelidovtobecomean NKVDagentinTurkey,acountryheknewwell. Nelidovsaidwithachoked,hystericalgiggle,‘ButfirstofallIshouldbe…executed…’Fitin respondedimpatiently,‘IamaskingwhetheryouwouldagreetoworkinTurkey.Turkey,asyou know,isneutral.’Nelidovmuttered,‘Whateveryouwant.’Rybkinastaredreproachfullyather ungraciousprotégé,whosimplymutteredagainandagain,‘Whateveryouwant…’Shetookthe stupefiedmanbacktoheroffice,whereheaskedwhyallthechiefshemetwereintroducedasPavel; wasthisacommoncodename?No,no,saidhisnewemployerirritably,merelyamatterofchance. SheledhimoutofthebuildingtoanearbyrestaurantcalledtheAragvi,wheretheysatamongtables occupiedbyRedArmyofficers,andsherecommendedthekebab. Herguestremainedtootraumatisedtoeat.Whensheorderedwine,fearfulofbeingpoisonedhe beggedtobeallowedtoswapglasses.Atlasthetookacautioussip,thenasked,‘Sowhenarethey comingforme?’Rybkinarespondedwearily,‘Didn’tyouheartheorderforyourreleasebeing read?’Herguestpersisted:‘Idon’tunderstand.HowcanIbeforgiven?’Afterlunchshesuggestedthat sheshowhimaroundanearbyagriculturalexhibition,andtheydrovedownGorkyStreet,where everyshopwindowwassandbaggedandthetrafficpolicemencarriedgasmasks.Sheleftherman thateveningattheMoskvahotel,tellinghimthatVasilyZarubinhadbeenappointedashiscase officer. Rybkina’snarrativeoftheseeventsisshotthroughwithmercilesscontemptfortheweaknessof Nelidov.Forallherstrikinglooks,shewasnotawomantowhomanyprudentmanwouldofferhis back,farlesshislips.NelidovneverwenttoTurkey.WhenZarubinknockedonhisdoornext morning,itremainedunopened.Onbreakingin,hefoundhisnewrecruitsuspendedfromarope madeoftornsheets.ThetransitionfromdoomedprisonertofavouredprotégéoftheLubyankawas toomuchforhisbrokenspirit.WhocansaythatNelidov’slastdecisionwasill-judged? 5 DivineWinds 1 M R S F ER GUS O N’ S TEA S ET TheJapanesemadelesseffectiveuseofintelligencethananyotherwarringnationbetween1942and 1945.Butinthemonthsbeforetheywenttowar,theirdecisionsweresignificantlyinfluencedbyan extraordinaryBritishindiscretion.ItwouldbeanexaggerationtosaythatMrsVioletFerguson’stea set,scarcelyamasterpieceofthepotter ’sart,causedJapantoattacktheBritishEmpire.Butthe incidentinwhichitplayedapartwasanexampleofanintelligencecoupthathelpedtodecidethefate ofnations. On11November1940SSAutomedon,ahumble7,528-tonBritishmerchantshipoftheBlueFunnel Line,exoticallynamedforAchilles’charioteer,wasploughingalonelycourseforPenang,ina stretchoftheIndianOceanwestofSumatrafarfromanyactivetheatreofwar.Nonetheless,at7a.m. whentheofficerofthewatchspottedadistantship,hewokehissleepingcaptain.‘Theoldman’, veteranseafarerWilliamEwan,quicklymadehiswaytothebridge,justforwardoftheship’sspindly funnel.Ewanpeeredhardthroughhisbinoculars,decidedthatthestrangerwasaDutchliner,andheld course.At8.03theothervesselwaslessthanamiledistantwhenitbrokeouttheinternationalflag hoists‘Donotraisethealarm’and‘Stop’,thenfiredawarningshotacrossthebowsofthefreighter, whichhadleftLiverpoolon24September,justastheBattleofBritaingavewaytotheBlitz,carrying amixedcargoofaircraft,cars,machineparts,microscopes,militaryuniforms,cameras,sewing machines,beer,550casesofwhisky,2.5millionChesterfieldcigarettes,andsixmilliondollarsin newlyprintedStraitscurrency. TheinterloperwasthedisguisedGermanarmedmerchant-cruiserAtlantis,oneofthemost successfulcommerceraidersofthewar,whichhadalreadycapturedandsunktwelveAlliedvessels sinceleavingBremenon31March.Theships’11Novembermeetingwasnotamatterofchance.The Atlantis’scaptain,forty-one-year-oldBernhardRogge,hadcapturedasetofBritishMerchantNavy codesaboardthefreighterCityofBaghdadon11July,whichassistedhimininterceptingother vesselsthereafter.Moreover,anItalianintelligenceunitintheMediterraneanforwardeddecrypts whichhelpedtopinpointthefreighter.Automedon’sbridgecrewfailedtoreadtheGermanflaghoist, andtheship’sradio-operatorbegantappingoutan‘RRR’emergencysignal.ThedoughtyCaptain Ewanshouted‘Hardonthewheel!’andhisshipbegantosheeraway.Hethensaid,‘Comeon everyone,let’sdoit–we’regoingtofight.’Onthesterndeckofthemerchantmanwasmounteda singleelderly4-inchgun.UnfortunatelyfortheBritish,however,Atlantiscarriedfive5.9-inchguns andasophisticatedfire-controlsystem.HavinginterceptedtheBritishship’sdistresscall,the Germansstartedshootinginearnest.ThefirstshellofAtlantis’sopeningsalvo,firedatpoint-blank range,smashedintothebridge,followedbyafurthersuccessionofhammerblowswhichbrought downthewirelessantenna,killedorwoundedalmostascoreofmenandtransformedAutomedon’s upperworksintoatangleoftwistedsteelinterruptedbygapingholes.BynowAtlantiswassoclose thatwhenaBritishseamanranaft,aGermanofficercalledthroughaloudhailerinEnglish,‘Donot approachthegun,orwewillblowyououtofthewater!’ SecondOfficerDonaldStewartregainedconsciousnessonthebridgetofindhiscaptainlyingdead besidehim.FirstOfficerPeterEvan,knowingthatprotractedresistancewasimpossible,haddashed fortheship’ssafetodestroytheconfidentialpapersassoonastheenemyopenedfire,butfellvictim tothesameshellthatkilledEwan:Evancollapsedseriouslywoundedonthethresholdofthecaptain’s cabinwherethesafekeywaskept.Inall,sixcrewmemberswerenowdeadandtwelveothers wounded.Bothshipsstopped.Stewartandthedeckhandswatchedgrimlyasalaunchboreaboarding partyfromAtlantistoAutomedon.AstreamofshockedandscaldedChinesefiremenemergedfroma hatchwayleadingtothefreighter ’sengineroom,whereblasthadcausedsteamleaks. TheGermanshadplannedtocommandeerAutomedonasasupplyship,butonseeingthescaleof damagecausedbytheirshells,insteadtheybegantosetscuttlingcharges.Lt.UlrichMohr,Atlantis’s adjutant,madeahastytourofthecaptureduringwhichheblewopenitssafe,removingcashand confidentialpapersalongwithaweightedgreencanvasbagfoundinthechartroom,which Automedon’sdeadofficershadbeentaskedtothrowoverboardinanyemergency.TheGermans enlistedtheaidofBritishseamentoshiftfrozenmeat,whiskyandcigarettestoAtlantis,beforethe crewwastransferredtotheGermanship.Personalmoneywasconfiscated,thoughtheircaptors issuedreceiptsforthecontentsofeachman’swallet.CaptainRoggewasnotonlyanexcellentseaman andtactician,butamanofhonourwhotookpainsforthewelfareofprisonersfromtheshipshe seizedonhisremarkableeight-monthcruise.AmongtheBritishpersonneltransferredtoAtlantis werethreepassengers,includingachiefengineeroftheStraitsSteamshipCompanynamedAlan Ferguson,andhisthirty-three-year-oldwifeViolet,onpassagetoSingapore.Encounteringthe AtlantiswasonlythelatestofseveralunfortunateadventuresthathadbefallenMrsFergusonsinceher marriagein1936,includingamiscarriageandanenforcedflightfromFranceinJune1940aboard thelastferryoutofBordeaux.Now,intenselyemotional,shewenttoCaptainRoggeandpleadedwith himthroughtearstosaveherluggage–twotrunkswhichcontainedalmostallherworldly possessions,includingaprizedteaset.TheGermantookpity.HesignalledMohr,stillonthedoomed Automedon,tomakeaquicksearchfortheFergusons’luggage. DonaldStewart,theonlyBritishofficerremainingaboard,didhisbesttodeflectMohrfromthe lockedstrongroombelowthebridgewheretheluggagewasheld,buttheAtlantis’sadjutantwould brooknodistraction.SeeingadoorthatansweredMrsFerguson’sdescriptionofthebaggagespace, hehaditblownopen.Beyond,aswellashertrunkshefoundsackuponsackofmailbags,someof themprominentlylabelledascontainingofficialcommunications.ThelaunchthatboreMohr,Stewart andtheboardingpartytoAtlantis’ssidesoonafterwardsrepeatedthetripheapedwithmailbags,as wellasMrsFerguson’sluggage. ThefreighterwasdispatchedtothebottomafewhoursafteritsfatefulencounterwithAtlantis.As theGermanraiderhastenedtoputdistancebetweenitselfandAutomedon’slastknownposition, RoggeandMohrsettoworkonthetreasuretroveofdocumentsbroughtacrossfromtheBritishship. TheMerchantNavy’scodesandsailingorderswerefamiliarstuff.ButthenthetwoGermansfound themselvesscanningmuchmoreinterestingmaterial–amassofreportsandcorrespondencedestined forBritishmilitaryandintelligenceoutpostsinSingapore,Shanghai,HongKong.Themostsecret papersofallincludedcorrespondenceaddressedtoAir-MarshalSirRobertBrooke-Popham,British commander-in-chiefintheFarEast.Thisgavedetailsofawarcabinetmeetingtodiscussthestrategic situationinAsia,heldatDowningStreeton8August1940,presidedoverbyWinstonChurchill. AppendedtothiswasahighlydetailedreportonthedefencesofBritain’sFarEasternempire, preparedforthegovernmentbythechiefsofstaff. Roggeimmediatelyrealisedtheurgencyoflandinghiscatch.TheBritishofficialmailwasplaced aboardthecapturedNorwegianfreighterOleJacob,whichsailedwithmostofAtlantis’sprisoners andasmallprizecrewtoKobe,inneutralJapan,whereitarrivedon5December.TheBritish documents,nowreposinginalockedchest,wereforwardedunderescorttotheGermanembassyin Tokyo,wherenavalattachéPaulWennekerstudiedthemwithalltheattentiontheydeserved–itis unknownwhetherhesharedtheirsecretswithRichardSorge.Hecabledadigestofthehighlightsto Berlin,thensenthomecopiesofthekeymaterialviatheTrans-Siberianrailway,inthehandsofLt. PaulKamenz,CaptainRogge’sprizeofficer.Fivedayslater,Wennekerwasgivenorders,personally endorsedbyHitler,topassthedocumentstotheJapanesegovernment,withonestipulation:the Abwehrwantedthecredit.Theembassywastoldtosaynothingaboutthepapershavingbeen removedfromaBritishfreighter–perhapspartlybecausethismightsuggesttotheJapanesethat Churchill’sgovernmentdidnotmuchvaluethematerial.Instead,Wennekerwastoldtoconveyan impressionthattheprizehadbeensecuredbybrilliantGermansecretservicework. On12DecemberWennekertookthedocumentsandtranslationspersonallytotheofficesofthe Japanesenavalstaff,placedthemwithoutcommentonthedeskofVice-AdmiralNobutakeKondo, Yamamoto’svice-chief,andsatinsilencewhiletheywereread.Kondowasappropriatelystunned– andgrateful.ThateveningheentertainedWennekertothebestdinnerTokyocouldprovide, expressingrepeatedthanksandsayingwonderingly,‘suchsignificantweaknessesintheBritish Empirecouldnotbedetectedfromoutwardappearances’.Whatdidthedocumentscontain,that causedKondosuchamazement?Byfarthemostimportantrevelationwasafifteen-pageBritish chiefsofstaffreport,presentedtothewarcabineton8August,entitled‘TheSituationintheFarEast intheEventofJapaneseInterventionAgainstUs’.Itwasheaded: SECRETCOPY72 COS(40)302(alsoW.P.(40)302) TOBEKEPTUNDERLOCKANDKEY Itisrequestedthatspecialcarebetakentoensurethesecrecyofthisdocument. TheBritishchiefscorrectlypredictedthelikelihoodofdeeperJapaneseincursionsintoFrench Indochina,threateningMalaya.Churchill’sgovernmentasserteditsunwillingness,foundedon avowedmilitaryweakness,togotowarwithJapanoverIndochina.ItacknowledgedthatHongKong, pearloftheBritishEmpireontheChinacoast,wasindefensible:intheeventofwar,onlytoken resistancecouldbeofferedtoaJapaneseassaultonthecolony.TheRoyalNavywaspatheticallyweak inFarEasternwaters,butuntilthetideofwarhadturnedintheMediterranean,theBritish acknowledgedtheirinabilitytosendmajorreinforcements.Atbest–orrather,indireemergency– onlyabattlecruiserandasingleaircraft-carriercouldbesparedfortheIndianOcean.IfJapan attackedAustraliaorNewZealandtheonlycredibleresponsewouldbeanappealtotheUnitedStates tosendforcestotheiraid.Thedominantthemeofthechiefsofstaff’sreporttogovernmentwasan assertionofBritain’sstrategicweakness:‘TheforcesinMalayaarestillfarshortofrequirements, particularlyintheair…OurowncommitmentsinEuropearesogreatthatourpolicymustbe directedtowardstheavoidanceofanopenclashwithJapan…Ourgeneralpolicyshouldbetoplay fortime;tocedenothinguntilwemust;andtobuildupourdefencesassoonaswecan.’Thepaper alsoshowedthattheBritishwereunawareofJapan’sformidablestrengthinnavaltorpedo-bombers, amongthedeadliestweaponsinitsarmoury. This,then,wasthethrustofthedocumentshandedoverbytheGermansinDecember1940,ata momentwhenBerlin’sforemostforeignpolicyobjectivewastodragJapanintothewar.Thehaul waspassedtothearmy’snewlyestablishedAsiaDevelopmentAgency,headedbyLt.Col.Yoshimasa Okada,whichwasexplicitlytaskedtostudythedefencesofBritain’sAsianempire.Hisfirst instinctivereactionwastoassumethatthepapersmustbeaGermanplant,fabricatedforpolitical purposes–theJapaneserightlydeclinedtobelievethatanymerespycouldhavesecuredsuch material.ButasOkadaandhiscolleaguesstudiedtheBritishorderofbattle,theyfoundthatthis closelymatchedassessmentsmadebytheintelligencestaffsofboththeJapanesearmyandnavy. Beliefgrew,andfinallybecameabsolute,thatthepaperswereauthentic.TheywerepassedtoJapan’s primeminister,whowasasimpressedashadbeenAdmiralKondoandCol.Okada. ItwouldbeasabsurdtosuggestthattheAutomedonpapersdeterminedJapantoriskwarin December1941asitistoattributeanyotherdecisiveeventinhistorytoasinglecause.Butthe evidenceisplainthatthecaptureddocumentsacceleratedtheseachangeinJapanesethinkingthattook placeduringthewinterof1940–41.HavingbeenallowedtodiscoverthattheBritishthemselves believedtheirSouth-EastAsianempiretobeacutelyvulnerable,theJapanesearmyandnavybecame increasinglypersuadedthatthe‘southernstrategy’ofassaultingtheWest’soverseasempiresoffered amoreattractiveoptionthanthealternative‘northernstrategy’ofengagingtheSovietUnion.Asis thewayofwarlords,becausetheAutomedonmaterialencouragedthemtowardsacoursetheywere mindedtotakeanyway,Japan’sleaderswilfullyneglectedotherintelligencefromEurope,especially reportsfromtheirnavalattachés,whichcastdoubtupontheprospectofGermanvictory,and especiallyuponitsimminence.TokyoadheredstubbornlytoabeliefthatHitlerwasdestinedto triumph.ConvictiongrewuponthegeneralsthatiftheywishedtoshareinthespoilsofloomingAxis victory,toavoid‘missingthebus’theymuststrikesoonagainsttheWesternPowers. AtlantiswasscuttledbyherowncrewsouthofStHelenaon22November1940,afterreceivinga firstsalvofromthe8-inchgunsoftheBritishcruiserDevonshire.TheGermanraiderthusbecame itselfavictimofsecretintelligence:ithadbeenorderedtomakearefuellingrendezvouswithU-126, atapositionintheSouthAtlanticrevealedtotheRoyalNavybyBletchleyPark.BernhardRoggeand hiscrewtooktotheboats,escapedcapture,andsurvivedthewar.TheAutomedondocumentswere recognisedinTokyoasthecaptain’snotablecontributiontoJapan’s1941–42triumph:afterthefallof SingaporeRoggewaspresentedwithasamuraiswordbyagratefulJapaneseEmperor–Göringand RommelweretheonlyotherGermanrecipientsofthiswartimehonour. AlanFergusonandhiswifeVioletcamethroughthewar,afterenduringyearsofinternment.So too,remarkably,didherteaset.ThetrunkinwhichitreposedaccompaniedhertoGermany,thenwas recoveredintactbyBritishforcesin1945.ItwasdispatchedtoSingapore,whereFergusonresumed hiscareerasanengineeringofficer,whileenjoyinghiswife’sgenteelafternoonentertainingashore. AsfortheBritishgovernment’spricelessdocuments,theircapturewithAutomedonreflecteda notableandbynomeansuniquecarelessnesswithsecretpapers.Whitehallwenttoelaboratelengths toconcealtheblunderfromtheworlduntilitwasrevealedaccidentallymanydecadeslater,by discoveryofsomeofWenneker ’smessagesinaGermanarchive.Thesagavividlyillustratesthefact thatsomeremarkableintelligencecoupsarethefruitsofrawluck,ratherthanofinspiredespionage. 2 TH E J A PA NES E TheAutomedondocumentscontributedtoTokyo’simpressivelycomprehensivelocalintelligence picturebeforeitsforcesattackedPearlHarborandtheWesternEuropeanAsianempiresinDecember 1941.TheJapanesetookmoretroubletoinformthemselvesabouttheirimmediateobjectivesahead oftheoutbreakofwarthanevertheydidafterwards.FormonthstheiragentscycledacrossMalaya, exploredtheUSPacificFleet’sHawaiianchorages,parleyedwiththeHongKongTriads.This, althoughthebulkoftheJapanesearmy’sattentionandresourcesremainedfocusedonChina,where itsmenhadbeenfightinganddyingsince1937,andwhereintelligence–joho–waseasilysecured andNationalistcodesreadilybroken.InMay1940,duringtheYichangoffensive,armycodebreakers enabledTokyo’sarmiestoanticipatethemovementsofalmosteveryChinesedivision.Inthesummer 1941BattleofSouthShanxi,thankstodecryptstheyinflicted80,000casualtiesonmuchlarger Chineseforces,whilethemselveslosingonly3,300men.CaptainKatsuhikoKudowashailedas Japan’sacecryptanalyst,andbecamethefirstintelligenceofficertobeawardedtheKinshiKunsho– ‘GoldenKite’–decorationforhisachievementsinChina. TheJapanesearmy’s‘Chinahands’wereknownasShina-tsu,ofwhomthemostcelebratedwas Gen.KenjiDoihara,dubbed‘LawrenceofManchuria’forhisespionageactivities.InJuly1940Kioya Izaki,theShanghaiintelligencecentre’sdeputychief,spentamonthvisitingHongKong,Cantonand Taipeiundercoverasatrader.Thestationrancovertoperationswithcodenameslike‘Sakura’ (‘CherryTree’),‘TakeBambo’,‘Fuji-Wisteria’.Oneofthese,in1941,floodedChinawithforged currency,printedbytheArmyInstituteforScientificResearchonspeciallyimportedGermanhighspeedpresses.MeanwhiletheShanghaicounter-intelligencebranchboastedastrengthof1,500men. Thenavy’sSpecialDutiesSectionuseddisguisedfishingboatsforoffshoresurveillanceoffreight movementstotheNationalists,especiallybytheBritish,andopenedaprivatetradingcompanyasa coverforagent-running. YetTokyolearnedlittleaboutthecommunists,partlybecauseMaoZhedong’sforcesused intractableSovietcodes.Anddespitealltheactivitydescribedabove,aningrainedsenseofcultural superiority–whichalsocausedthemtocondescendtoAnglo-Saxons–madetheJapaneseunwilling seriouslytoengagewithChinaforintelligencepurposes.Astaffofficeracknowledgedafterthewar: ‘WefailedtorealisethatwewerefightingtheChinesenotonlyinthemilitaryfieldbutalsointhe political,economicandculturalfields.Wewerealmostblindinthelatter.’OneJapaneseagentin ShanghaiwasreducedtoforwardingtoTokyoassourcematerialAgnesSmedley’sbestsellingbook China’sRedArmyMarches. Untilatleast1942theRussians,acrosstheborderinManchuria,werethetargetsofmuchmore ambitiousJapanesecovertoperationsthantheWesternPowers.Tokyowasmorbidlyfearfulofits communistneighbours,andafteritsdrubbingatNomohanin1939theImperialArmysustaineda profoundrespectfortheirmilitaryabilities.Mostofthe22,000Kempeitaimilitarypolicedeployed overseaswereeitherperformingsecuritydutiesinChinaorwatchingtheRussians.Soprimitivewas theirtrainingthatJapanesespiesweretaughttomeasurethelengthofbridgesintheSovietUnion frominsideclosedtrainsbycountingthenumberofbumpsaswheelspassedoverrailjoins.Atthe ManchurianpostofHsinking,320listenerstappedphonesandmonitoredvoiceradiocommunication. EightsigintsitesmonitoredRussianwirelesstransmissions,andtheJapanesesometimeschanged borderguardsatSakhalinjusttoprovoketheRussiansintosendingsignals,inthehopethatthese couldbedecrypted.In1940aformerPolisharmycodebreakerassistedtheJapanesetocracksome low-gradeRedAirForceanddiplomaticcodes.ThreehundredJapaneseofficersayearattendedthe RussianlanguageschoolinHarbin. Sevenhundredsoldierswerecontinuouslyemployedpeeringthroughbinocularsacrosstheborder fromManchuriaintotheSovietUnion,recordingthemovementsofeveryman,horseandvehicle, togetherwithallshiptrafficinandoutofVladivostok.Severalex-tsaristofficersscrapedalivingin HarbinscanningPravda,IzvestiaandotherSovietpublicationsforTokyo’sbenefit.Aceaseless pingponggamewasplayed,whereintheJapaneserecruitedRussianexpatriates,dispatchedthem acrosstheManchurianborderonlyfortheSovietsto‘turn’them:theaverageJapaneseagentsurvived atlibertyforjustaweek.In1938Gen.GenrikhLyushovoftheNKVD’sFarEasternDirectorate escapedafiringsquadbyfleeingintoManchuria.Hespenttheensuingsevenyearsunderhousearrest inTokyo,buthishostsfoundthattheirprizehadfrustratinglylittletotellofpracticalvalue.Inthe wakeof‘Barbarossa’,asteadystreamofRussiandeserters–130ofthembytheendof1941– crossedintoJapaneseterritory,butmanyprovedtobeNKVDplants. SomeJapaneseinitiativeswerespectacularlyunprofitable:theIntelligenceDepartmentenlistedthe aidoftheArmyInstituteforScientificResearchatNoboritotodeviseachemicaltoparalyseRussian guarddogs’powerofscentandstimulatetheirsexualappetite,tomakethemlessmanageable;both dogsandhandlersremainedunmoved.AttemptstouseassourcesJapanesebusinessmenvisiting Russiaachievedlittle,forwheneversuchvisitorslefttheirhotelstheyweredoggedbyNKVD watchers,aswereattachésinMoscow.Anintelligenceofficer,Lt.Col.SaburoHayashi,complained thatprobingSovietsecretswas‘likesearchingforveryfinegolddustinmud’. Japan’sideasaboutgatheringforeignintelligencefocusedoverwhelminglyuponespionage.Its agentspenetratedtheSovietembassyinBeijing,andin1941oneconcealedhimselfinacupboardof thelibraryoftheBritishconsulateinTaipei,wherethesafewaslocated.Themancollapsed unconsciousinhisstiflingconfinement,butherevivedintimetowatchtheconsulopenthesafeand tomemoriseitscombination,whicheventuallyyieldedafewcrumbs.Japaneseagentnetworks operatedinCaliforniaandMexicoundercoverasfishermen,dentistsandbarbers;therewasachain ofJapanesebarber/agentsinthePanamaCanalZone.SomeBritishandAmericanrenegadeswere recruitedassources:formerRoyalNavysubmarinerLt.CmdrCollinMayersprovidedinformation forcashuntilhisarrestin1927.Anex-USNavyyeomannamedHarryThompsonreceived$200a monthfromhisJapanesehandleruntilsentencedtofifteenyears’imprisonmentin1935. CmdrFredRutlandwasadecoratedBritishairmanwhomadehislivingafterretirementby briefingtheJapaneseandpromotingdudcompaniesattheirexpense–foratimetheymaintainedhim inamansioninBeverlyHills.BothMI5andtheFBIwerewellawareofhisactivities.Thelatter decidedthathewasJapan’sprincipalagentintheUS,thoughaMay1935reporttoTokyofrom RutlandinCaliforniawasafairsampleofhisunimpressivewares:‘The[US]ArmyandNavywant warandinmyviewthismightbeputoffforafewyears…EveryoneIhavemetinAmericathinksa warwithJapanisinevitable.’Lt.CmdrArataOka,Japan’snavalattachéinLondon,arguedthat‘it wouldbewrongtorelyonRutlandaloneincaseofwar ’,whichwasanunderstatement.TheJapanese nonethelesslikedtheirtametraitorsufficientlytogivehimanother£4,000whenherevisitedJapanin 1938.TheungratefulRutlandthensailedtoAmericaandapproachedCaptainEllisZacharias,theUS Navy’sAsianintelligencespecialist,toproposeasaleofJapanesesecrets.ThislefttheFBI bewilderedaboutwhichsideRutlandwason,buthewasplainlyatroublemaker,andwasfinally arrestedon6June1941.London’sanxietytoavoidapublicscandalcausedhimtobedeportedto Britain,wherehewasinterned.Fouryearsafterhisreleaseattheendofthewar,Rutlandkilled himself. CmdrOkadidnobetterwhenhehiredHerbertGreene,anephewofWilliamGreene,asenior AdmiraltyofficialandbrotherofthenovelistGraham.Okacodenamedhim‘Midorikawa’–‘Green River ’–paidhim£800andcherishedhopesthatGreenehadanentréetothesmartLondonclubland wheresecretswerediscussed.Instead,inDecember1937Greeneproclaimedhishalf-hearted treacherytotheDailyWorker,whichblazonedalloveritsfrontpagehisannouncementthathewasa Japanesespy.InJuly1941,whenJapanwasstillaneutral,itsnavalattachéformallyrequestedfrom theBritishgovernmentdetailsofthenationalelectricitygrid.GuyLiddellofMI5brandedthis ‘characteristicimpertinence’,sinceBritishsurveillanceofficershadjustseenamemberofthe JapaneseembassystaffpassGermancashtoanAbwehragentoperatingunderDoubleCrosscontrol. TheonlyadvantagesenjoyedbyJapanesespies,saidLiddell,wasthattheywereveryhardtowatch ‘astoaEuropeantheyalllookalikeandthereistheadditionaldifficultyoftheblackoutandfour exitsfromthemilitaryattaché’soffice’.TheJapanesenavy’smostusefulintelligenceconnectionin LondonwasRear-AdmiralLordSempill,anenthusiasticNazisympathiser.Whenitwasfoundthathe hadbeensellingclassifiedinformationtoTokyo,in1941hewaspermittedtoresignquietlyfromthe RoyalNavyandretiretohisScottishcastle;Churchillflinchedfromatreasontrialattheheartofthe oldaristocracy. ThelastsignificantJapanesespyinAmerica–ifshecanbedignifiedassuch–wasVelvalee Dickinson,whopassedinformationonnavalmattersthroughafriendinBuenosAires.Bornin Sacramentoin1893,aStanfordgraduate,sheworkedforsomeyearsinaSanFranciscobank,then assistedherhusbandLeeinabrokeragebusinessthatfailed.ThereaftershefoundworkinNewYork CityasadollsaleswomanatBloomingdale’s,beforestartingamodestlysuccessfuldollstoreofher ownonMadisonAvenue.HerassociationwithTokyobeganwithherhusband’smembershipofa Japanese-Americansocietybeforehisdeathin1943.AsaninformantforJapaneseintelligenceshe received$25,000,atthecostofalsoreceivingaten-yearjailsentencefromafederalcourtfor violationofcensorshipstatuteswhenarrestedandconvictedin1944.OtherclumsyJapanese espionageeffortsonbothsidesoftheAtlantic,includingtheextensiveCalifornianTachibana network,werecurtailedwithoutmuchdifficulty,andwithnegligiblelossofAlliedsecrets. TheleadersofJapan’sarmedforcesdisagreedaboutalmosteverythingelse,butwereofonemind inregardingintelligence-gatheringasamechanicalprocesswhichcouldreadilybecarriedoutby juniorofficers–theirviewwasevenmoremyopicthanthatofHitler ’sOKW.Analysis,suchasit was,wasconductedbythearmy’s2ndDepartmentandthenavy’s3rd.Thenavydesignatedsigintas Toku-jo–specialinformation;codebreakingasA-jo;telephonetapsasB-jo;DFdirection-findingas C-jo.Itidentifiedfourlevelsofreliabilityforinformation:Ko–certain;Otsu–almostcertain;Hei– alittleuncertain;Tei–uncertain.Aswithothernations,intheJapanesearmyandnavyapostingto intelligencewasacareerdead-end.Evenwhenwarcameandcleveruniversitygraduateswere conscriptedintouniform,almostallweredispatchedtobecomecannonfodder,ratherthanassigned tomilitaryornavalroles–intelligenceinparticular–wheretheirbrainsmighthavebeenuseful. Japan’snavalcodebreakersachievedlittlesuccessinbreakinghigherBritishandAmerican ciphers,andthusconcentratedinsteadonradiodirection-findingandtrafficanalysis.Sobitterwasthe rivalrybetweentheservicesthatwhenthearmybrokesomelow-gradeAmericanstripcodes,the soldiersconcealedtheirknowledgefromthesailorsuntil1945.Atnotimebefore1943didJapan devoteanythinglikethepersonnelandresourcesnecessarytomakeeavesdroppingandcodebreaking majorsourcesofintelligenceagainsttheWesternPowers,nordidtheircommandersseemmuchto careaboutthisweakness. Withnationalisticcomplacency,Japantookforgrantedthesecurityofitsowncodes,diplomatic, militaryandnaval.CaptainRisaburoItowarnedthenavythatitstrafficwasvulnerable,butwas ignored.Japan’sType91and97ShikiO-bunInjikiciphermachines,createdbynavalengineerKazuo TanabeandknowntotheAmericansas‘Red’and‘Purple’respectively,weredeemedimpregnable– theForeignMinistryusedthelatter,andthenavy’s‘Coral’and‘Jade’employedsimilartechnology, differingfromEnigmabecauseitemployedtelephonestepping-switchesinsteadofrotors.The army’s‘Green’machinealoneusedthelatter.SupremelyfortunatelyfortheAllies,Tokyoignoredan April1941warningfromtheGermanembassyinWashington,derivedfromanAmericantraitor ’stip totheSoviets,thatUScodebreakershadcrackedPurple.WhenBerlinpresentedtheJapanesewith severalEnigmasandurgedthemtomanufacturecopiesfortheirownuse,themachineswereleftto rust;Japanpersistedwithitshome-grownmodels.GiventhedifficultiesexperiencedbyAmerican andBritishcodebreakersinreadingtheJapanesearmy’straffic,theymaywellhavebeenbetteroff doingso. Japan’smilitarycounter-espionageorganisationwasbizarrelynamedthe‘ConspiracySection’, devotedtorootingoutplotsagainstthenation.InDecember1937anintelligencetrainingcentrewas opened,laterknownastheNaganoSchool.Thisofferedtheusualtradecraftcourses,withoptional extrasinlock-picking,ninjamartialartsand‘Kokutai-gaku’–‘StudyforNationalStructureand Mind’,ideologicalindoctrination.Nagano’steachingwasunusual:itencouragedofficerstostay alive,ratherthantoconductbanzaichargesandcommitritualsuicideintheeventoffailure.A weaknessofthecounter-espionageservicepersisted,however:itlavishedextravagantenergyon monitoringJapan’sowncivilianpoliticians,notforevidenceoftreason,buttoensurethattheydid notdeviatefromtheirownarmy’sforeignpolicyobjectives.InJuly1937,whenPrinceKonoyeas primeministerdispatchedenvoystoNankintodiscusspossiblepeacenegotiationswiththeChinese Nationalists,thearmydecryptedcablesaboutthetalks,andpromptlysentmilitarypolicetoarrest Konoye’scouriers. HachiroArita,apre-warforeignminister,moaned:‘InJapanweareinaverydifficultpositionfor conductingrealdiplomacy,becauseJapanesepoliticiansarealwayswatchedbythemilitary.Icannot makegooduseofflatteringordiplomaticlanguage…IfIsaysomethingwronginatelegram,the Japanesearmyandnavyinterceptitandimmediatelycriticiseme…Thesituationissoawkward.’ JapanhadaCabinetIntelligenceDepartment,intendedtobrieftheprimeminister,butthenavyand armyinsistedonsustainingmonopolyinfluenceoverthenation’sinnercouncils,andsecuredits emasculation:theCIDbecameamerepropagandaorgan. TheWarMinistryhaditsowncounter-intelligenceorganisation,withafifty-strongstaffcharged withconcealingJapan’spreparationsforwar.InMitsubishi’sNagasakishipyard,workonthenew battleshipMusashiwascarriedonbehindvasthempcurtains,screeningitfromview.Theluggageof foreignrailtravellerswasroutinelyexamined.TheKempeitai’s6thSectionmaintainedRDF surveillanceforillegalwirelesstransmissionsbyforeignagentsinJapan.Almostallforeigners’ correspondencewasinterceptedatTokyo’sCentralPostOfficeandphotographedbeforeonward dispatch.OutsidetheUSembassyJapanesesecretpolicemen,strippedtotheirunderpantsagainstthe heat,maintained24/7surveillancefrombehindcurtainsinasupposedlybroken-downcar–‘thespy wagon’,asitwasknowntodiplomats.In1936,militarypolicechancedonaletterinEnglish,signed only‘Jimmy’andpostedattheTeikokuhotelinTokyo;itgavedetailsoftherefittingofthebattleship Nagato.AninvestigationswiftlypinnedauthorshiponlocalReuterscorrespondentandMI6 informantJamesCox.Hewasarrested,andthreedayslaterdiedafterbeingthrownorthrowing himselffromthefourthflooroftheTokyopoliceheadquarters. ItwasneverestablishedwhetherCoxcommittedsuicideorwasmurdered–thelatterseemsmore plausible,giventhebrutalityoftheKempeitai.TheBritishForeignOfficegavehiswidowa£5,000 pay-off,presumablytosecurehersilence.Norwasherhusband’stheonlymysteriousdeathofan Englishman:inOctober1938aRoyalNavylieutenantnamedPeacockealsovanishedwithouttrace.In July1940alone,fifteenBritishcitizenswerearrestedonsuspicionofespionage,thoughmostwere laterreleased.IfthesecasesrepresentedsupposedsuccessesforJapanesecounter-intelligence,it remainsstrikingtobeholdthat,forallJapan’sincreasinglyfeverishxenophobiaandintensive surveillanceofforeigners,theSorgespyringfunctionedforeightyearsattheheartofAxisstrategymaking. Japan’sintelligence-gatheringmachinefailedmiserablywhereitmatteredmost:inprovidingthe nation’srulerswithanunderstandingoftheprincipalenemywhomtheyproposedtoattack–the UnitedStates,mostpowerfulindustrialnationonearth.AfterJapan’sdefeatCol.ShinobuTakayama ofthearmy’sOperationsDepartmentacknowledgedruefullythatitwouldhavebeenprudentto researchAmerica’sactualandpotentialwarmakingpowersbeforeembarkingonaconflictwithit. ThemoststrikingcharacteristicofJapan’sleadershipwasitsrefusaltoexamine,farlesstoactupon, unpalatableinformation.Nosinglebranchofgovernmentwasresponsibleformakingand coordinatinggrandstrategy.Thechiefofarmyintelligence,Major-GeneralYuichiTsuchihashi,was notconsultedabouttheimplicationsofjoininganalliancewithGermanyandItaly,becausehewas knowntoopposeit.ThearmypaidlittleattentiontoAmericanmatters,whichitsgeneralsconsidered thebusinessofthenavyandtheForeignMinistry.Theyreadsomelow-gradediplomaticwireless traffic,andgainedalittleintelligencefromniseis–immigrantslivingintheUS–butmostlyrelied onopensources,whichmeantattachésreadingnewspapers.SeveralofficersexploredthePhilippines anditsgarrison,buttherewasnoseriousanalysisoftheUSArmy’sactualandpotentialstrength. Oncethewarbegan,someofficerswhohadspenttheirentirepreviouscareersstudyingtheSoviet UnionwerearbitrarilytransferredtomonitorAmerica.Japan’sSouthAreaArmyeventually abolisheditsUSandBritishintelligencesections,becauseitsseniorofficersdecidedthattheywere producingnothingofpracticalvalue.Operationsdepartmentsdespisedintelligenceofficersasold womenwhoraisedobjectionstointendedcoursesofaction,andthemselvespreferredtorelyupon front-lineeyeballobservationbysoldiersinthefield.WhenthearmymovedintoIndochinain1940, itsOperationsDepartmentsummarilyappropriatedallintelligenceresponsibilitiestoitself,andran theinvasionasiftheintelligencestaffdidnotexist. TheattitudeoftheJapanesenavybeforePearlHarborreflectedaprofoundcontradiction:thoseof itsseniorofficerswhousedtheirbrainsrecognisedtheirownnation’sstrategicvulnerability,because ofitsdependenceonimportedoilandcommodities,butmadelittleattempttoimposetheirviews upontheTokyogovernment.TheyknewthatitwouldbeeasytoannihilatetheRoyalNavy’ssmall forcesintheFarEast,butrecognisedtheimmensepoweroftheUSNavy.OperationschiefCaptain TasukuNakazawawrotebeforehostilitiesbegan:‘Wehavenochancetowinawar[withBritainand theUS].Wargamesresultedinheavylossesinshippingandlossofcontrolofoverseasshipping lanesandlinesofcommunication.’AdmiralIsorokuYamamotowasforemostamongthosewho, whiledislikingandresentingtheUnitedStates’policies,recogniseditseconomicandindustrial supremacy.Heandhiscleverestsubordinatesknewthatiftheyfailedtosecurevictoryfast,they wouldnotgetitatall.AFebruary1941assessmentconcluded:‘After1944,theUSNavywouldbe confidentofvictory.’ In1941also,anewNationalInstituteforTotalWarStudiescarriedoutexhaustivewargaming, presuminganadvanceintoSouth-EastAsia.ThisconcludedthatwithintwoyearsJapanwouldbeon itsknees,withSovietentryintothewardeliveringacoupdegrâce.Gen.HidekiTojo,soontobecome primeminister,readtheInstitute’sreport,thencommented:‘Youdidagoodjob,butyourreportis basedonakindofarmchairtheory,notarealwar…Warisnotalwayscarriedoutasplanned.We shallfaceunpredicteddevelopments.’Tojochoseinsistentlytobelievethatthesewouldoperatein favouroftheAxis.InSeptember1941theEconomicPlanningSectionoftheWarMinistryreached thesameconclusionastheWarStudiesInstitute,butonceagainthefindingswererejectedbythehigh command.TheImperialJapaneseArmy’schiefofstaffdeclaredthat‘thereportisagainstour nationalpolicy’,andorderedittobeburnt. Thearmy’sironmenalmostalwaysprevailed,recitingtheirmantrathatthegovernmentand peopleoftheUnitedStateswouldsuccumbtoamoralcollapseaftersufferingtheearlydefeatsand humiliationsthatJapanwasrightlyconfidentofbeingabletoinflictuponthem.Thesoldierswere alsoconvincedofGermaninvincibility,andspurneddoubters.In1940Japan’snavalattachéin LondonandmilitaryattachéinStockholmemphasisedBritishsuccessesinresistingtheGerman onslaughtontheirisland,andthescaleofLuftwaffelosses.On25Julythearmy’smonthly intelligencereportexpressedrespectforthestrengthofBritain’sresistanceintheairbattleoverthe island:‘TheUKismaintainingthefightagainstGermanywithgreatdetermination…Britishpublic opinioncontinuestosupportthegovernment’shard-linepolicy.’Thereporthighlightedthe postponementofHitler ’sinvasion,Operation‘Sealion’,becauseofGermanlackofamphibious capability,andfailuretoachieveairsuperiority. IJAheadquartersdismissedtheauthorsofthesereportsashavingsuccumbedtoBritish propaganda,andinsteadembracedthesupremelyoptimisticdispatchesofBaronŌshima,the JapaneseambassadorinBerlin.UntilJune1941theForeignMinistrymadepolicyonanassumption thatfollowingBritain’sdefeat,theNaziswouldforgeanalliancewiththeSovietUniontodividethe spoils.Japan’sgeneralssuccumbedtoeuphoriafollowingthesigningofthe13April1941Soviet– Japaneseneutralitypact,whichtheyconvincedthemselvesmadethenationsafefromatwo-frontwar. WhenŌshimareportedthatHitlerplannedtoinvadetheSovietUnion–hiswarningsbecameexplicit on18April1941andwerereinforcedon4June–theJapanesegovernmentsimplyrefusedto considerthisnewandunwelcomescenario.OnlyafortnightbeforetheGermanonslaught,foreign ministerMatsuokadoggedlyinsistedthattherewasonlya40percentprospectofsuchanevent.War ministerTojosaid:‘Idonotthinkitisanurgentmatter.’Thecabinetdeferreddiscussionofthe implicationsofaRusso–Germanwar,clingingblindlytoitspolicyofsupportingtheNazismoreor lesswhatevertheydid.Withoutreferencetothecivilianpoliticians,thearmydispatchedlarge reinforcementstoManchuriaincaseadecisionwasmadetojoinHitler ’sassaultonStalin. Before‘Barbarossa’waslaunched,intelligenceofficerLt.Col.SaburoHayashisuggestedthatif theRussianscouldgetthroughwinterundefeated,theirarmiescouldregroupandsustainalong struggle,buttheOperationsDepartmentandhighercommandersdismissedthisassessmentoutof hand.HayashiwroteagaininAugust:‘ItisexpectedthattheGermanswilloccupyMoscow,buthave nomoresuccesswithin1941.WhenwintercomestheSovietArmywillhaveanopportunitytocatch itsbreath,andwillneversurrender.TheCommunistPartyisstrongandsolid.Followingthefallof Moscow,theGermanswillbeobligedtocontinuethewar,whilemaintainingcontrolofhuge capturedterritories.Tosummarise:thewarwillnotendquickly.’Yettheall-powerfulOperations DepartmentinsteadpredictedStalin’sloomingoverthrowbyhisowngenerals.InJapanasinNazi Germany,ithadbecomeaninstitutionalpreceptthatnointelligenceassessmentcouldbe countenancedbypolicy-makerswhichrancontrarytoadesirednationalcourse.Againandagain betweenthe1930sand1945,strategywasdistortedtoconformwiththevisceralinclinationsand ambitionsofcommanders,ratherthanwithrealities,ofwhichbyfarthemostimportantwere America’seconomicsuperiorityandGermany’sprecariousstrategicpredicament. ThemostpenetratingappreciationofJapan’sprospectsbeforePearlHarborwaspresentedto Tokyonotbyitsownanalysts,butbyWinstonChurchill.InApril1941hedispatchedamemorandum totheJapaneseforeignministerwhichwasdesignedtodeterwar.‘Iventuretoaskafewquestions,’ wrotetheBritishprimeminister, whichitseemstomedeservetheattentionoftheImperialJapaneseGovernmentandpeople. 1.WillGermany,withoutthecommandoftheseaorthecommandoftheBritishdaylightair,beabletoinvadeandconquerGreat Britaininthespring,summerorautumnof1941?WillGermanytrytodoso?WoulditnotbeintheinterestsofJapantowait untilthesequestionshaveansweredthemselves? 2.WilltheGermanattackonBritishshippingbestrongenoughtopreventAmericanaidfromreachingBritishshores,withGreat BritainandtheUnitedStatestransformingtheirwholeindustrytowarpurposes? 3.DidJapan’saccessiontotheTriplePact[withGermanyandItaly]makeitmorelikelyorlesslikelythattheUnitedStates wouldcomeintothepresentwar? 4.IftheUnitedStatesenteredthewaratthesideofGreatBritain,andJapanrangedherselfwiththeAxisPowers,wouldnotthe navalsuperiorityofthetwoEnglish-speakingnationsenablethemtodisposeoftheAxisPowersinEuropebeforeturningtheir unitedstrengthuponJapan? 5.IsItalyastrengthoraburdentoGermany?IstheItalianFleetasgoodatseaasonpaper?Isitasgoodasitusedtobe? 6.WilltheBritishAirForcebestrongerthantheGermanAirForcebeforetheendof1941,andfarstrongerbeforetheendof 1942? 7.WillthemanycountrieswhicharebeinghelddownbytheGermanarmyandGestapolearntoliketheGermansmore,orwill theylikethemlessastheyearspassby? 8.IsittruethattheproductionofsteelintheUnitedStatesduring1941willbe75milliontonsandinGreatBritainabout12½, makingatotalofnearly90milliontons?IfGermanyshouldhappentobedefeated,asshewaslasttime,wouldnotthe7 milliontonssteelproductionofJapanbeinadequateforasingle-handedwar? FromtheanswerstothesequestionsmayspringtheavoidancebyJapanofaseriouscatastrophe,andamarkedimprovementinthe relationsbetweenJapanandthetwogreatSea-PowersoftheWest. Tokyo’sanodynereplywasinevitable:‘TheforeignpolicyofJapanisdetermineduponafteran unbiasedexaminationofallthefactsandaverycarefulweighingofalltheelementsofthesituation sheconfronts.’YetsuchaprocessnevertookplaceinTokyo.Japan’srejectionofstrategic intelligenceassessment,andofrationaldecision-making,wasresponsibleforitscommitmenttoa pathtocatastropheon7December1941. TheonlyspeciesofintelligencetheJapanesehighcommandtreatedseriouslywasthatwhich concernedimmediateobjectives.Thus,inthemonthsbeforethearmyandnavywenttowar,both energeticallyprobedthedefencesoftheEuropeanSouth-EastAsianempires,thePhilippinesand PearlHarbor.Tokyo’sappetiteforanadvanceintoIndochinawassharpenedbytheJuly1940 decryptionofatelegramtoWashingtonfromtheAmericanconsulinSaigon,sayingthattheBritish wouldmakenomilitaryresponsetosuchaJapaneseinitiativewithoutapromiseofUSsupport, whichwouldnotbeforthcoming.FurtherdecryptsofdiplomaticmessagesinAugust,notably includingthoseoftheVichyFrenchauthoritiesinIndochina,confirmedtheinabilityorunwillingness oftheWesternPowerstoresistaJapanesetakeover.Thus,on22September,theJapaneseforceda Frenchsignatureonanagreementwhichadmittedtheirtroopsnextday.Herewasacasewhere intelligenceplayedasignificantrole,albeitinconfirmingJapan’scommitmenttoacourseitsrulers favouredanyway. Thearmy’sSouth-EastAsiaGroup,establishedin1939,wasresponsibleforexploringthe defencesoftheEuropeanempires.BecauseThailandwastheonlyindependentcountryintheregion, theJapanesemadeitthehuboftheirintelligence-gathering,directedbymilitaryattachéCol.Hiroshi Tamura,whofocusedespeciallyonidentifyingMalayaninvasionroutes.Hissoldiersmeasuredevery roadandbridgefromIndochinaandThailandintoMalaya.AgentsexploredthehugeDutchoil refineriesatPalembangsodiligentlythatwhenJapaneseparatroopslaterdescendeduponthem,each mankneweverydetailofthetarget.TheJapaneseacknowledgedthattheBritishhadsomeformidable codebreakingtalent,focusedintheirFarEastCombinedBureauinSingapore,whichworkedclosely withBletchleyPark.Anavalcodebreakerwhomonitoreditstraffic,CommanderMonotono Samejima,decryptedmaterialwhichshowedthattheBritishhadbeenreadingsomelow-grade Japanesesignalswithintwenty-fourhoursoftransmission.Samejimarecalledlater:‘Ibecameaware ofthetremendouscapabilityofUKintelligence.’Hissuperiors,however,caredonlyaboutcounting theirenemies’soldiers.Bytheendof1940athousandJapanese‘tourists’,allgraduatesofthearmy intelligenceschool,wereworkingoutofThailand.BritishtroopsexercisinginMalayafound themselvesfollowedeverywherebybicyclingJapaneseequippedwithpencilsandnotebooks.Their findingswerecirculatedthroughoutthearmyasan‘IntelligencerecordofBritishMalaya’,which includedmapsoftheSingaporegarrison’sinstallations.Thegeneralstaffconcludedfromsuch agents’reportsthattheethnicdiversityofBritishimperialforceswasaweakness.Itwasdismissiveof theAustralians:‘Theirqualityisbad.Thetroopsarecomposedchieflyofjoblessmenandrough individuals.Theyarenotawell-disciplinedarmy.Theirvalourinbattleisfamous,buttheirtraining andequipmentarenotadequate.’TokyoassertedthatmanyIndiansoldierswerebothill-trainedand anti-British;theycouldfightbravelyinahead-onpositionalclash,butwerevulnerabletorapid flankingmovements–ashrewdassessment,vindicatedbyeventsinthesubsequentcampaign. Inthecourseof1941JapaneseagentsmadecontactswithIndian,MalayanandBurmesenationalist groups,offeringcovertsupportfortheirambitionsforindependence,whichmanyfoundanattractive proposition.AJanuary1941telegramfromTokyotoJapan’sconsul-generalinSingaporeordered himtoaccelerate‘agitation,politicalplots,propagandaandintelligence’.InMay,Japan’sForeign Servicecabledallitsmissionsintheregion,urgingthemtohastentheexpansionofclandestine networksontheperipheryoftheIndianOcean,becausewarwasobviouslylooming.TheIndians, especially,wereurgedtopromotedisaffectionamongsoldiersoftheRaj,andbegantodosoin1939; whentheassaultonMalayawasunleashed,thepoorperformanceofseveralIndianregiments suggestedthattheJapanesepropagandaoffensivehadachievedsomesuccess:the1stHyderabads,for instance,arebelievedtohaveshottheirownBritishcolonelandadjutantatanearlystageofthe battalion’sdisintegrationonthebattlefield. TokyothoughtBritishaircrewgreen,anditwastruethatmostofthepilotsdeployedinMalayaand Burmawerelessexperiencedthantheirenemycounterparts.TheJapaneseprobablyreceivedsome informationfromatraitorintheBritishranks:forseveralmonthsduring1941CaptainPatrick Heenanof300AirIntelligenceLiaisonSectionappearstohavewirelessedinformationaboutRAF dispositionsfromasecrettransmitter.Thirty-one,borninNewZealand,Heenanhadinheritedfrom hisfatherawarmsympathyfortheIrishRepublicanArmy.HewasrecruitedbyTokyoduringa1938 leavespentinJapan,andendedhisespionagecareerbybeingshotagainstaharbourwallin Singaporejustbeforeitsfall. AsforPearlHarbor,inAugust1941twenty-eight-year-oldEnsignTakeoYoshikawaoftheUS& BritishsectionofJapanesenavalintelligencearrivedinHawaiiwithdiplomaticcover,andspentthe monthsthatfollowedexploringeveryaccessibleareaofinteresttotheplannersbackathome,while conductinganuncommonlyenergeticoff-dutylovelife.HereportedthreetimesaweekbyPurple cipher,andthoughhismessageswereroutinelyintercepted,theUSSignalsIntelligenceServicein Washingtonwasoftenthreeweeksinarrearsdecryptingthem,notleastbecauseithadonlytwofluent andaccurateJapaneselinguists.InOctober,Yoshikawa’sbossLt.CmdrMinatoNakajimamadea personalvisitonaJapaneseliner,andreceivedtheensign’swrittenreportontheUSNavy’slocal strengths,deploymentsanddefences.ThoughYoshikawawasinternedafterPearlHarbor,hewas subsequentlyallowedtoreturnhomeundertheagreementonexchangeofdiplomaticpersonnel. Furtherinformationwasacquiredbythelocalconsularstaff,assistedbythelargeJapanese expatriatecolonyonHawaii–41,346ofthem.Theirdataconfirmedthenavyinitsdeterminationto strikeatPearlHarborratherthanagainstthealternativeAmericananchorageatLahainaPort.Neither thearmynortheMinistryofForeignAffairswasinformedabouttheagreedobjectives,andPearl wasneverexplicitlymentionedinnavalradiotraffic.Thecriticalmistakeintheplanningofthe onslaughtwasnotoneofintelligencecollection,butofanalysis:theadmiralsbackinJapanfailedto recognisetheimportanceofPearl’shugeoil-tankfarmsandrepairfacilities,andneverincludedthese intheirtargetprogramme.AsforJapaneseperceptionsoftheUSArmy,theyassessedAmerican troops–especiallythePhilippinesgarrison–asindividualistswholackedstayingpowerandfighting spiritforaprotractedstruggle.Japan’sgeneralsplannedforavictoriousterminationofthePacific warinthespringof1942,whereupontheywouldlaunchamajorassaultontheSovietUnion. ThusJapanwenttowarknowingmuchaboutitsimmediateobjectives,butwilfullyignorantandnaïve aboutwhatwouldfollow.Yamamoto’sairsquadronstookoffforPearlHarboron7December1941 atjustthemomentwhenGermanfailurebeforeMoscowwasbecomingapparentinBerlin.Theonly successoftheadvocatesofcautioninTokyowastopersuadeJapan’srulerstoconfinethemselvesto assaultingtheUSandWesternEuropeanempires,andtoavoidjoininghostilitieswiththeSoviet UnionuntilGermanvictoryseemedimminent.ThejudgementsonwhichtheJapanesebasedtheir decisiontofight–toshacklethemselvestoatotteringgiant–werefantasticallyill-informed.They overvaluedGermanmight,underratedthatoftheUnitedStates.Moreover,theypersuadedthemselves thattheycouldconductalimitedwar,whichtheycouldterminatebynegotiationatamomentoftheir ownchoice.Instead,ofcourse,theyfoundthemselvesengagedinanexistentialstruggleinwhichthey musteitherachievetotalvictoryorfacealmostannihilatorydefeat. 3 TH E M A NW H O W O N M I D WAY ThesurprisesufferedbytheUnitedStatesatPearlHarborwasasgreatasthatwhichtheSovietUnion incurredatthelaunchof‘Barbarossa’,andequallyinexcusable.ItsarmycodebreakersledbyFrank RowletthadachievedanextraordinaryfeatbycrackingJapan’s‘Purple’diplomaticcipherinAugust 1940.DuringtheweeksanddaysbeforetheJapaneseattackonHawaii,almostasmuchinformation becameavailabletotheUSgovernmenttoindicatetheimminenceofwarasStalinreceivedbefore Hitlerattackedhim.ButtheUSadministration’sresponsewasassupineashadbeenthatofthe Kremlin.JustastheBritishrequiredmanymonthsunderthestimulusofwarbeforetheydeveloped effectivemachineryformanagingandexploitingintelligence,sotheAmericanarmedforcesbegan todosoonlyamidthewreckageofthebattleshipsofitsPacificFleet. AdmiralJohnGodfrey’sJuly1941BritishreportonUSintelligenceconcludedthat‘cooperation betweenthevariousorganisationsisinadequateandsourcesarenotcoordinatedtothemutualbenefit ofthedepartmentsconcerned.Thereislittlecontactbetweentheintelligenceofficersofthedifferent departmentsandthedesiretoobtaina“scoop”isfairlygeneral…Thevalueofthematerialobtained bytheUSintelligenceorganisationsfromEuropeisnotconsiderable,thoughinformationonthe PacificareaandSouthAmericais…onthewhole,high-grade…TheOfficeofNavalIntelligenceis indangerofdegeneratingintoagraveyardforstatisticsbecauseitisinclinedtoregardintelligence asanendinitself…Manyofthefaultswhichhavebeenenumeratedwillberecognisedassimilarto thosefromwhichBritishIntelligencesufferedbeforethewar.’GodfreyconcludedthatonceWilliam Donovan’snewintelligence-gatheringorganisationgotgoing,manygoodthingsmightbepossible, ‘butitwouldbeprudenttoconcludethatUSIntelligenceisunlikelytobeofmuchassistancetothe jointwareffortformanymonthstocome’. Thisprovedtobetrue.TheUSArmyandUSNavycontributednothingsignificanttoAllied knowledgeofAxismotionsformonthsafterPearlHarbor.Butthen,inJune1942,fromoutofadank basementintheNavyYardonOahucameasinglepiercingshaftoflightthatilluminatedtheentire Pacifictheatre.ItmadepossibletheUSNavy’svictoryatMidway,whichinsideforty-eighthours transformedthecourseofthewaragainstJapan.Itwasarguablythemostinfluentialsingle intelligenceachievementoftheglobalconflict. WhiletheBritishevenbeforethewardeployedbrilliantcivilianstospearheadtheircodebreaking, theUSNavychosetorelyinsteaduponanalmostrandomlyselectedgroupofcareerofficers,among theleastvaluedoftheirservice.Withpitifullyslenderresources,theirachievementcouldnotmatchin scalethatofBletchleyPark,nordiditsavetheUSfromhumiliationontheDecember1941‘Dayof Infamy’.ButtheofficerwhomadethegreatestsinglecontributiontosubsequenttriumphatMidway retiredfromhisservicewithlittlehonour,andwenttohisgraveknownonlytohistorians. JosephRochefortcutanawkwardfigure:hewasapoorseaman,withnotalentformaking importantfriends.Withouthisgifts,however,itisunlikelythatadecisivebattlewouldhavebeen foughtinthePacificbetween4and7June1942,andevenlessplausiblethatitwouldhavebeenwon bytheUnitedStates.Whathappenedthatdaywastheoutcomenotofasuddenflashofinspiration,but oftwodecadesofweary,thanklesslabour. Rochefortwasbornin1900,youngestsonofIrishparents;hisfatherwasanOhiorugsalesman. Anuntidychild,inhighschoolheexcelledonlyatmaths.AtseventeenheenlistedintheUSNavyas anelectrician3rdclass,thenscrapedacommissionasareservistandbecameanengineer.AttwentyonehemarriedElmaFay,hischildhoodsweetheart,thoughhewasCatholicandsheaBaptist.In1921 hemanagedtotransfertotheregularnavy,buthiscareerlanguished:henarrowlyescapedcourtmartialwhenatankeronwhichhewasdutyofficerdraggeditsanchorinSanFranciscoBayamidsix destroyers.In1925hewasdetachedfromserviceonthebattleshipArizonatostudycryptanalysis,for whichskillatbridgeandcrosswordsseemedtofithim.HeworkedintheNavyDepartmenton Washington’sConstitutionAvenue,buttheassignmentdidnotrepresentpromotion:intelligence rankedlowontheservice’stotempole.TheUSNavyhadthusfarachievednothingtomatchthe achievementofthearmy’scodebreakingdepartment,the‘BlackChamber ’establishedin1917under HerbertYardley,whichbrokeaJapanesediplomaticcipherasearlyas1921. Thenavywaslearning,however.RochefortstartedbyreadingthebookElementsofCryptanalysis, writtenbytheWarDepartment’sWilliamFriedman.HeworkedunderthebrilliantLt.Laurance Safford,aformerchiefyeomanintheUSNavalReserve,whobecamehistutorandmentor.They wereassistedbyacivilian,AgnesMeyerDriscoll,whoalsomadeanotablecontribution.Rochefort foundhimselfenjoyingthework.Breakingacode,hesaidlater,‘makesyoufeelprettygood,because youhavedefiedthesepeoplewhohaveattemptedtouseasystemtheythoughtwassecure…Itwas alwayssomewhatofapleasuretodefeatthem.’InFebruary1925Safforddepartedforanalmost mandatoryspellofseaduty,leavingRochefortinchargeoftheresearchdesk.Thisconsistedofonly threefull-timers:himself;anex-actornamedClausBogel,whodidlittletojustifyhisrations;and Driscoll,dubbed‘MadameX’,whocursedfluently,despisedmake-up,butrubbedalongprettywell withRochefort.Japan’ssecretswerealwaystheprincipaltargets.In1920theOfficeofNaval Intelligencehadruna‘blackbagjob’,photographingacopyoftheJapaneseRedCodefromtheNew Yorkconsulate.Itbecameobviousthathigherlanguageskillswereindispensableifthecodebreakers weretomakeseriousheadway:Lt.CmdrEllisZacharias,acareerintelligenceofficerandfluent Japanesespeaker,wasdraftedintothesectiontoworkalongsideRochefort. Zachariaswrotelater:‘Thefewpersonswhowereassignedtothissectionweretaciturn,secretive peoplewhorefusedtodiscusstheirjobs…Hourswentbywithoutanyofussayingaword,just sittinginfrontofpilesofindexedsheetsonwhichamumbo-jumbooffiguresorletterswas displayedinchaoticdisorder.’GiventhattheUnitedStateswasatpeaceanddeterminedtostaythat way,theintensitywithwhichahandfulofnavalofficerslabouredattheirarcanecraftseems extraordinary,andfarremovedfromthelazytempothatprevailedelsewhereintheUSNavy.Those menandthatoneremarkablewomanwereobsessives,whoworkedallhoursandignoredSundays. Theofficewaspermanentlyshroudedintobaccosmoke:Rochefortchain-smokedcigarettes,apipe, theoddcigar.Theysometimeswenthometootiredtoeatuntiltheyhadunwoundforseveralhours. Alllostweight. SaffordhadestablishedachainofinterceptstationsinShanghai,Hawaiiandelsewhere,which liftedJapan’ssignalsfromtheether.OncethemessagesreachedRochefort’soffice,thesection workedtogethertocrackthem,withAgnesDriscollprobablytheablestanalyst.Occasionally,new officersweresenttothem,totesttheirsuitabilityascodebreakers.Mostwerewashedout:theylacked thepeculiar,indispensablesensefortherhythmofpuzzles. Aftertwoyears,Rocheforthadhadenough–notofcodebreaking,butofNavyDepartmentpolitics. Hissection’sactivitiescameunderCommunications,butIntelligencewagedconstantwartotakeit over.Stillalieutenant,Rochefortbecameexecutiveofficerofadestroyer.Atseahistactlessness, carriedtothepointofboorishness,exasperatedsuperiors.InhissparetimehecheckedouttheUS Navy’scodes,andtoldthecommander-in-chiefthatthecommunicationssystemwascloggedwith trivialmessagesthatshouldneverhavebeenencrypted.Thiswaspoorlyreceived. In1929hisoldcolleagueEllisZachariasarrangedforhimtobepostedtoJapan,tolearnthe language.Whileservingthereforthreeyears,RochefortbecameaclosefriendofanotherAmerican navalofficer,EdwinLayton;itisameasureofhisalmostmorbidsenseofdiscretionthatinalltheir hourstogether,hetoldLaytonnothingabouthisbackgroundincryptanalysis.Thereafter,Rochefort spentmostofthe1930satsea,successivelyasagunnery,intelligenceandnavigationofficer.In October1939hewaspostedtoPearlHarbor,wherehewasappalledbythecasualroutines,butshared thedelusionsofhissuperiorsthatnoenemywoulddaretoattackHawaiiorthePhilippines. LauranceSaffordnowheadedOp-20-G,thenavy’scodebreakingoperation.Withhalftheworldat warthiswasmodestlyexpanding,whileJapaneserelationswiththeUSdeteriorated.Between1934 and1939theUSgovernmentandarmedforceshadfaithfullyrespecteddomesticlaw–explicitly Section605ofthe1934FederalCommunicationsAct,whichbarredinterceptionofmessagesbetween USandforeigncountries,radioorcable.Thereafter,GeorgeMarshallgrantedsomelatitudetothe variouscodebreakingagenciesandtheireavesdroppers,whichmadepossiblethesmallmiracleof Purple.Safford’sactivities,likeFriedman’s,nonethelessrepresentedlawbreaking.Heaskedfor RocheforttoheadupthePearlstation,knownasCOM14.Rochefortacceptedthepostingreluctantly, becauseofhismemoriesofthedepartmentalstruggles.Butwhereelsewashetogo,atforty-one, withnobodyclamouringforhisservices?InJune1941hetookuphisnewresponsibilities,reporting directtoAdmiralHusbandKimmel,PacificFleetC-in-C.Onlybelatedly,fourmonthslater,didhe receivealong-delayedpromotiontocommander. COM14–‘StationHypo’–whereRochefortandhisteamweretomakehistory,wasquarteredin theechoing,unlovelybasementoftheNavyYardadministrationbuilding,enteredthroughatimelockedunmarkeddoorguardedbymarines.‘TheDungeon’,asitwasdubbedbyinmates,lookedlike asmall-townpoolhall,evenuntothechronicsmokehaze,becauseeverybodyworkedwithacigarette stuckinhismouth.Achiefpettyofficer,TexRorie,satatadeskbythedoor,screeningvisitors.The floorwasundressedconcrete,thewallswerepaintedwithmud-colouredsealant,andtheprimitive ventilationsystemrecycledstaleair.WhenRochefortfirstjoined,muchofthebasement’shundred feetbyfiftywasemptiness,butthroughthemonthsthatfollowed,itfilledrapidly.AbatteryofIBM Hollerithpunch-cardtabulatingmachinesclatteredrelentlessly:theircontributiontoHypo’s successes,asindeedtoallUScodebreaking,deservesemphasis.InSeptember,fiveJapaneselanguageofficersjoinedthesection.Soonthereweretwenty-threemen,workinginfoursectors:the languageteam,trafficanalysts,ship-plotters,cryptanalysts.Lt.CmdrThomasDyer,ashort,dark officerwithheavyspectacleswholookedmorelikeaneccentricprofessorthananavalofficer,was consideredthebestofthelatter,andbecameaheroofAmerica’scryptographicwar.Othersincluded Lt.HamWright,whoboreapassingresemblancetotheactorWallaceBeery;andLt.CmdrJack Holtwick.Rochefortnolongerthoughtofhimselfasacryptanalyst;instead,hesaid,‘[I]fancied myselfatranslator.’ Theyworkedintheatmosphereofauniversitylibrary–therewasnochatterorloudtalk,insteada fierceearnestness.WhenJasperHolmes,anex-submarinerinvalidedoutoftheservice,joinedthe team,hewasawedbytheintensityofitslabours:‘HadInotwitnesseditIneverwouldhavebelieved thatanygroupofmenwascapableofsuchsustainedmentaleffortundersuchconstantpressurefor suchalengthoftime.’Butheadded:‘theresultstheyachieveddidnotappearproportionatetotheir efforts’.In1941–42,whenBletchleyParkwasalreadyoperatingadozenbombes,thetoolsmostused byRochefort’steamwerepaper,pencilandtheIBMtabulators,thoughHoltwickexperimentedwith anothercrudemechanicalaid.Thecryptanalystsusedmathematicalskillstoexposethecodegroups inamessage–iftheycouldgetthatfar–thenturneditovertothelinguists.Theintroductory briefingfornoviceswassimple:‘Gentlemen,hereareyourdesks.StartbreakingJapanesecodes.’ TheDungeon’spersonnelworkedinanatmosphereofalmostdefiantinformality.Theyaddressed eachotherbyname,notrank,andcarednothingfordress.Rochefortaffectedslippersandamaroon smokingjacket,whichheclaimedprotectedhimfromthechronicchill.JasperHolmesfoundnothing companionableabouthischief,butimmediatelyrecognisedhisstrengthofleadership.Theyworked aneight-dayweek:sixon,thentwooff.Apaintedsignwasaffixedtoapillarnearthedesks:‘Wecan accomplishanything…provided…noonecareswhogetsthecredit.’Rochefort,alwaysobsessed withsecurity,causedHypotobeofficiallydesignatedas‘NavyCommunicationsSupplementary Activity’.ThosepersonnelintheNavyYardwhoknewwhattheteamwasdoingregardedthemwith condescensioninthosedays;theycommandednorespect,becausetheyhaddonenothingtoearnit. AsatBletchleyinthebeginning,onlythecodebreakersthemselvesunderstoodwhattheymightbe abletoachieve,andhowvastcouldbethesignificanceofsuccess. Pearl’slisteningstationswerelocatedatWahiawaandLualuale,withadirection-findingfacilityat thelatter,somethirtymilesfromtheNavyYard.Operatorsrecordedmessagestransmittedinthe JapaneseversionofMorse:thiscustomarilyusedablendofthekanasyllabaryandromanjii transliteratedcharacters,superimposedonatelegraphiccode–‘JN-25’messagescontainedonly numbers.Inthelateautumnof1941,astartlinglackofurgencycharacterisedthelogisticsofthe codebreakingoperation.AlthoughboththeinterceptoperatorsandHypohadbeguntomaintain watchesaroundtheclock,therewasnosecureteleprinterlinkbetweenthereceivingstationsandthe Dungeon,onlyapartyphoneline.Onceeverytwenty-fourhours,thelatestcropofmessageswas collectedbyjeepfortheforty-minutetriptotheNavyYard.USNavycodebreakersaroundtheworld couldcommunicatewitheachotherbyprivateciphersystem,usinganECMIImachinewithfifteen rotorsinthreerows,butliaisonbetweenthemwascriminallypoor.Rochefort’steamwasnot informedthatthearmyinWashingtonwasbreakingtheJapanesePurplecipher,norabouttheONI’s May‘pinch’oftheOrangecodefromaJapanesefreighterinSanFranciscoharbour.Indeed,Hypo wastoldnothingaboutwhereitsownlaboursfittedintoabiggerpicture.AtPearl,theofficeofFleet IntelligenceOfficerEdwinLayton–Rochefort’soldcomradeinTokyo–waslocatedamilefromthe NavyYard,attheFleetsubmarinebase. MostoftheweaknessesofUSNavyintelligence,matchingthoseoftheUSArmy,wererootedin Washington,foundedintheinabilityofseniorofficerstograspthepropernatureofinformationgatheringandmanagement,whichtheyunderstoodlittlebetterthandidtheirJapanesecounterparts. TheyunderratedJapan’sairpower–whenTokyonavalattachéStephenJurickasawaZeroonthe groundatanairshowandsenthomeadetailedreport,hewasrebukedfortakingtheplaneso seriously.In1940afriendlyinformantinJapangavetheUSembassydetailsofthenewType93 ‘LongLance’,anoxygen-fuelledtorpedothatwasthebestofitskindintheworld.TheBureauof Ordnancedismissedthisreport,declaringsuchaweapontobeimpossible.Herewasareflectionof thetribalismofmanynations’armedforces:ifWehavenotcreatedsuchaweapon,howcouldThey havedoneso?ItwasastoundingyetcharacteristicthatBrigadier-GeneralHayerKroner,headofthe army’sintelligencedivision,toldaPearlHarborinquiryin1942thathehadnotbeenprivytohisown service’sJapanesedecrypts.Meanwhilewithinthesignalsdepartments,achildishinter-service agreementhadbeenreachedin1940,wherebythearmyandnavyreadPurpleonalternatedays,and delivereditsoutputtotheWhiteHouseinalternatemonths.Thedysfunctionbetweenthenavy’s operationsandintelligencedivisionswasnotimprovedbythefactthatin1941thelatterhadthree successivedirectors.OnlybrutalwarexperiencecausedtheUSarmedforcesslowlytolearntotreat intelligence,andespeciallycodebreaking,withtheseriousnessandsensitivityitmerited. InDecember1941,HypohadnotcomeclosetobreakingtheJapaneseFlagOfficers’Code,notleast becausetherewastoolittletraffictoworkon,butitwasenjoyingsomesuccesswithsecondary systems.Formostof1941,justtenmembersofOp-20-GwereworkingontheJapanesenavy’sJN-25. AtthatstagethemostimportantweaponinRochefort’sarmouryforproducingradiointelligencewas trafficanalysis–locatingJapanesewarshipsthroughtheirwirelessmessaging,eventhoughthe contentwasunreadable.Evenforachievingthis,theUSNavylackedthetechnologytheBritishhad developedandemployedintheirFarEastCombinedBureauinSingapore:‘radiofingerprinting’ throughcine-camerarecordsoftheoscilloscopeimagesofeachuniquesignalpattern,enabling interceptorstoidentifyindividualships. InthedaysbeforePearlHarbor,itwasevidenttotheteamintheDungeonthattheJapanesewere planningsomethingbig,thoughtheyhadnonotionwhatitmightbe.Theydetectedanunprecedented concentrationofnavalairpower,butAdmiralYamamotoputdownadenseelectronicsmokescreento maskitspurpose.FormonthsRocheforthadbeentrackingthemovementsofmajorunitsofthe Japanesefleet,butinmid-Novemberhelostitssixcarriers.HiscounterpartsattheCaststationinthe Philippinessaidtheywereconfidenttheflat-topswerestillinhomewaters.Nothoughtofanassault onPearlcrossedRochefort’smind:knowingJapanashedid,andasadoggedlylogicalman,he thoughtitimplausiblethatHirohito’snationwouldstartawarwiththeUSwhichitwascertaintolose. SopoorwasintelligenceliaisonthatRochefortwastoldnothingofthe24Septembermessagefrom TokyotoitsHawaiiconsulate,askingforthepreciselocationsofUSbattleshipsinsidePearlHarbor. ThiswassentintheJapaneseconsularcode,designated‘J-19’,whichwasdeemedalowpriorityfor breaking,andthusthecodedmessagewasnotflowntoWashingtonuntil6October,amidamassof othermaterial.Evenwhenthesignalwasread,neithertheUSArmynorUSNavyintelligence directoratesthoughtitsignificantenoughtoreplaytoHypo. ButRochefortwassufficientlysureoftheimminenceofsomemajorJapaneseinitiativethaton29 Novemberhedispatchedfourofficerstotheinterceptstationtomaintainalisteningwatchfora ‘Winds’actionmessagethattheyknewmustbecoming.Nextday,theJapanesechangedalltheir ships’identificationcallsignsforthesecondtimeinamonth–yetanotherindicationthatabig operationwasimminent.On3December,WashingtonatlastcondescendedtoinformPearl–and Rochefort–thattheJapanesehadorderedalltheirdiplomaticmissionstodestroycodesandciphers. AnFBItapontheJapaneseconsulinHonoluluconfirmedthathetoohadbeentoldtoburnhiscodes. Butstillno‘execute’ordertotheJapanesefleetwasinterceptedonHawaii.Intheweekbeforethe stormbroke,RochefortpleadedguiltytoneglectingonemessagetoaJapanesesubmarinethatwas notbrokenuntil12December.Butevenhadthisbeenread,giventheinstitutionalisedpassivityofthe USgovernmentandarmedforces,itishardtosupposethatitwouldhavechangedanything.On Saturday,6DecemberanexhaustedRochefortwenthomeatlunchtime.Thatafternoonalastcoded cablefromtheJapaneseconsulate,detailingthepositionsofbarrageballoonsandtorpedonets aroundthePearlanchorage,washandedinattheRCAofficefordispatch.Butthecopyearmarkedfor America’scodebreakerswentuncollecteduntilmuchlater. ThelegendoftheDayofInfamybeganatBainbridgeIslandinPugetSoundearlyon7December, whenaUSNavylisteningpostinterceptedciphermessagesdispatchedfromTokyotoWashingtonon thecommercialcircuitoftheMackayRadio&TelegraphCompany.Bainbridgere-transmittedthem totheNavyDepartment’s20-GY,wheretheywerereceivedbyLt.(JuniorGrade)Francis Brotherhoodasheapproachedtheendofhisnightshift.Brotherhoodhadalreadyseenthirteenparts oftheJapanesemessagetoitsembassy,inresponsetotheUSdiplomaticnotedemandingJapan’s withdrawalfromChina.Now,ashortfinaldecryptclatteredofftheprinter–inJapanese.Itwasjust after5a.m.Lt.CmdrAlwinKramer,chiefUSNtranslator,arrived150minuteslater,at7.30a.m.,and withinminutesrecognisedthatthelastmessage,breakingoffnegotiations,mustmeanwar.Anarmy messengersetforthwithacopydestinedfortheWarDepartment,whileothersweresenttotheWhite HouseandtheNavyDepartment.At9a.m.–3.30a.m.inHawaii–RufusBratton,chiefoftheFar Easternsectionofmilitaryintelligence,readthedecrypt,fourhoursbeforetheJapaneseambassador wasinstructedtodeliverhismomentousmessagetotheStateDepartment.Brattonattemptedtocontact Gen.GeorgeMarshall,andwastoldthathewasoutriding.Anaidewhowentinsearchofthechiefof stafffailedtofindhim.At10.30,BrattonatlastspoketoMarshall,stressedtheurgencyofthenews, andofferedtodashouttohisquartersatFortMyer.MarshallinsteaddrovetotheWarDepartment, whereheinsistedonreadingallfourteenpagesoftheJapanesemessageinsequence,thoughKramer urgedhimtogostraighttotheend.At11a.m.,withtwohoursstilltogobeforePearlwashit,the chiefofstaffvetoeduseofthescramblerphonetocontactHawaii,onthebizarregroundsthatitwas insecure.InsteadhesentawarningcableviatheWarDepartment’smessagecentre,whichreached HonoluluviaRCAat7.33a.m.ItwasfinallydeliveredtoGen.WalterShort,localarmyC-in-C,at 2.40p.m.,asfiresragedaroundthefleetanchorage. InHawaiiat7.55onSundaymorning,JoeRochefortwaspackinguphiscarforafamilypicnic whenthefirstJapaneseaircraftstreakedacrosstheskyabovePearlHarbor.Momentslater,Dyer calledhimtoproclaimemotionally,‘We’reatwar.’OneofRochefort’smensaidmuchlater,‘[All]of usfelttheremorseofparticipatinginatremendousintelligencefailure.’Thissentimentwasquite unjustified.Whattookplacerepresentedapoliticalandoperationalfailure,matchingthatofthe Kremlinlessthansixmonthsearlier.Rowlett’sachievementinbreakingPurplewasentirelywasted whenitsrevelationsmatteredmost.ThankstotheSignalsIntelligenceService,overwhelming evidencewasinthehandsofthenation’sexecutivebranchandarmedforceschiefstoindicatethatthe Japanesestoodpoisedonthebrinkofoffensiveaction.Whiletherewasacaseforsupposingthatthe BritishandotherEuropeancolonialpowersinAsiamightbeTokyo’stargets,ratherthantheUnited States,failuretoplacethenation’sdefencesinthemaximumstateofreadinessreflectednegligenceat thehighestlevel.ItwasonlybecauseGeneralGeorgeC.Marshallcommandedsuchaffectionand respectthatheescapeddevastatinganddeservedpersonalcensurefortheblowthatfelluponhis countryon7December.Thesamemightbesaidaboutthepresidentandhisdepartmentalheads. Instead,however,blamewasallowedtostopwiththeservicecommanders-in-chiefonHawaii,and withtheUSNavy’schiefofoperations,anoutcomejustifiedonpragmaticgrounds,thoughnoton principledones. Whatmatterednowwastostrikeback.Rochefortsaidlaconicallytohisteam,‘ForgetPearlHarbor andgetonwiththewar.’InthefirstdaysofJanuary1942,thenewPacificC-in-CAdmiralChester NimitzvisitedtheDungeon.Itwasnotahappyoccasion.Rochefort,preoccupiedwithaJapanese signalhewasworkingon,gaveaperfunctoryreceptiontothisnewarbiterofhisdestiny.Nimitzwas anywayinnomoodtobeimpressed,becauseheregardedthe7Decembercatastropheasrepresenting aculpablefailurebythenavy’ssignalsintelligenceofficers.FromWashington,LauranceSafford warnedRochefortthattheNavyDepartmentsharedNimitz’sview.ItconsideredthatHypowas blameworthy,becauseithadbeenfooledbyJapanesedeceptions.InthefollowingmonthSafford himselfjoinedthecasualtiesoftheDayofInfamy,beingremovedandreplacedbyCommander JosephRedman,anofficermoreskilledinself-promotionthancryptanalysis.Redmanhadone significanttalent:heunderstoodtheimportanceofradiodeceptioninmodernwar,andhadwrittena paperaboutitforthechiefofnavaloperations.ButhewasnofanofRochefort,whowouldprobably havelosthisownjobbutforthesupportofEdwinLayton,whomNimitzretainedasfleetintelligence officer. Hypowasnowinundatedwithwork,createdbyacontinuoustorrentofintercepts.Onemorning JasperHolmeswastalkingtoanavalfriendoutsidetheintelligenceloop,whosawThomasDyer emergefromtheDungeonunshaven,dishevelled,utterlyexhaustedafterhoursoftoil.Theother officergazedatDyerwithoutenthusiasmandsaid,‘Now,theregoesabirdwhoshouldbesenttosea togetstraightenedout.’Onereasonthecodebreakersheldlowlyrankswasthattheyhadspent insufficienttimeafloattoqualifyforpromotions.Holmes,evermindfulofRochefort’sinsistenceon security,merelymumbledastheywatchedDyerwalkaway,‘Oh,he’sallright.’Afterwards,however, hefeltthathehadletdownHypo’smostbrilliantcryptanalyst,‘likePeterwhenhebetrayedtheLord’. Thechallengewastocracktheenemy’snewJN-25bFleetCode.Dyer,WrightandHoltwickwereat theforefronthere–Rochefortfocusedontryingtoanalysethesignificanceofthefragmentarytraffic theyread.Nowthattheimportanceofmechanicalassistancewasrecognised,moremenwereneeded toruntheIBMsorterswhichconstitutedHypo’smemorybank;eachinterceptrequiredsometwo hundredpunchcards.Theonlyhandsavailablewerebandsmenfromthewreckedbattleship California.WhentheFBIsetaboutscreeningthemenforhigh-securityduty,severalwithforeign namesweremarkedforexclusion,butRocheforttookthemanyway;LaytongotanodfromNimitz. Intheweeksthatfollowed,theDungeon’sstandingwiththecommander-in-chiefremainedlow.He repeatedlydemandedinformationfromRochefortaboutthemovementsofJapan’scarriers,and againandagaintrafficanalysisproducedthewronganswers.ButthenRochefortandhismennoted thebuild-upofJapaneseforcesatTruk,andcorrectlyguessedthattheywereheadingforRabaul.His stockrose.HehighlightedJapaneseweaknessintheMarshallsandtheGilbertIslands,which promptedstrikestherebyHalsey’sandFletcher ’staskforces.Hypobeganpassingintelligenceabout prospectivetargetstoFleetsubmarineheadquarters,thoughthisyieldedmeagreresultsbecause Americantorpedoesfailed–astheycontinuedtodountiltheendof1943.Nimitztransferredsomeof Rochefort’sJapaneselinguiststotheUScarriersatsea,tomonitorthevoicetrafficofenemypilots. Thiswasasignificantlosstothecodebreakers,butprobablyavalidswitchofadesperatelyscarce resource. Frommid-January1942onwards,HypowasreadingfragmentsofJN-25bmessages,albeitwith manywordsmissing.On2MarchRochefortpredictedanairraidonHawaiionthe4th.Sureenough, twobigflying-boatsattackedatnight–theJapaneseenjoyedtheassistanceofbeingabletoread Americanweatherreports.SomebombsfellharmlesslyinthemountainstenmilesfromPearl,others inthesea;USfightersfailedtointercepttheattackers.ButRocheforthadproducedanaccurate prediction,anddidsoagainwhenhewarnedofaMarchairraidonMidwayisland.Themost importantaspectofthislastbreakwasthatitgaveHypotheJapanesecodedesignationforMidway: ‘AF’.BytheendofMarchtheAmericanswerereadingasubstantialnumberofJN-25bmessages. WhentheCastcodebreakingteamwasevacuatedfromdoomedCorregidoritwasre-establishedasa jointoperationwiththeAustraliansinMelbourne,andwassoonmakingitsownsignificant contribution. TheunrelentingstressafflictingtheinmatesoftheDungeonwasnowintensifiedbyovercrowding –fortyofficersandahundredenlistedmenwerecrammedintothebasement,whereJasperHolmes comparedtheatmospheretothatofanoperationalsubmarine.Heandothersupportingstafffelt guiltythattheycoulddonothingtoalleviatethestrainonthehandfulofcryptanalysts,whocarriedso muchoftheload.RochefortandDyerstartedanewroutineoftheirown,eachalternatingtwenty-four hourson,twenty-fouroff.Hypo’schief,scarcelyasunnysoulnoranenthusiastforsmalltalk, seemednevertorelax.HespokelessandlessaboutanythingsavetheJapanesesignalofthemoment. Heworkedtwentyhoursadayandsometimesmore,breakingoffonlytosnatchalittlesleeponacot inacorneroftheDungeon.Dyer,meanwhile,subsistedonadietofBenzedrineinthemorning, Phenobarbitalatnight.Eventhoseoftheirstaffwhomanagedlongerbreaksfoundthemselvesbored andlonely,existinginasweat-stained,subterranean,monasticallymasculineworld.HamWright’s quartersnearthesubmarinebasebecamealoungewhereofficerscouldlistentohisoperarecords andtakeadrinkiftheyleftaquarterbehind. Rochefort’srecordatthistimewaspatchy,thoughnolesssothanwasthatofBletchleyinitsearly days.BetweenDecember1941andJune1942,whileOp-20-GinWashingtonrecovered16,000 Japanesecodeadditives,Hyporecovered25,000–theIBMmachinesplayedanimportantrolehere, usingtwotothreemillionpunchcardsamonth.On8April1942,itschiefcorrectlypredictedthatthe JapanesewereheadingforPortMoresbyinPapuaNewGuinea,havingidentified‘RZP’asitscode designation.Butmanyotherlocationsremainedobscure,andRochefortprovedmistakenin supposingfiveJapanesecarrierstobeatsea–atthattimetherewereonlythree.Hemadeanaccurate appreciationofJapaneseintentionsaheadofthe7–8MayBattleoftheCoralSea,butmisjudgedtwo criticalJapanesecarriermovements.Theoutcomeoftheclashwasadraw,butastrategicsuccessfor theAmericans,becausetheJapaneseabandonedtheirthrustagainstPortMoresby. EarlyinMay,RochefortinformedNimitzthatitwasplaintheJapanesewereplanningamajornew initiative,thoughhewasunsurewhat.Amonghisvirtueswasafabulousmemoryforplaces,words, callsigns.TheNavyDepartmentdecreedthatthethreecodebreakinggroupsinWashington, MelbourneandHawaiishouldeachaddressenemymessagesrelatingtodesignatedgeographical areas.Rochefortignoredthisclumsyconstraint,andstrovetograspthestrategicbigpicture.Hypo wasnowreceivingbetweenfivehundredandathousandinterceptsaday,about60percentofall Japanesetransmissions,ofwhichitsofficersmanagedtoreadfragmentsofsome40percent.By9 May,RochefortwasabletotellNimitzthattheJapanesefleetwouldsailforamajoroperationonthe 21st,butadded:‘Destinationoftheaboveforceisunknown.’ TheC-in-CspeculatedthattheJapanesemightintendanewassaultonPearl,orevenagainsttheUS WestCoast.Hypo,awarethatYamamotowasinterestedintheUSbaseintheAleutians,ponderedthe possibilitythathemightlaunchnotjustonemajoroperation,buttwo.13Maywasacriticalday: decryptsmadeplainthatPearlandtheAleutianswerenottheforemostJapanesepriority.Instead,this wastobeMidway,themostforwardofallAmericanPacificbases,1,200milesnorth-westofHawaii. AninterceptedmessageinstructedthesupplyshipGoshuMarutoloadstoresatSaipan,thenproceed to‘AffirmFox’–AF.RochefortrecalledsignalsbackinMarchwhichidentifiedAFasMidway.He pickedupthesecurephonetoLayton,tellinghim,‘It’snotcutanddried,butit’shot!’Theintelligence officersaid,‘Themanwiththeblueeyeswillwanttoknowyouropinionofit.’ Nimitzwasassuredlyinterested,butpreoccupiedwithotherbusiness.Onthemorningof14Mayhe sentCaptainLyndeMcCormick,hisnewwarplansofficer,todiscussthepossiblethreattoMidway. OnplysheetslaidupontrestlesintheDungeon,Rochefortandhisteamsetouttheirexhibits–a successionofkeyintercepts,togetherwithequallyimportanttraffic-analysisdata,andtalked McCormickthroughthem.Thisprovedafiercelyintense,protractedconversation,whichcontinued formostoftheday.Attheendofit,McCormickreturnedtoNimitz’sofficeandreportedthathe believedRocheforthadgotthestoryright.ThoughHypohadnoindicationofthefullJapaneseorder ofbattle,itseemedplainthatYamamotointendedtocommitfourcarriersinsupportofan amphibiousassaultonMidway. Thiswasadebateofsupremeimportanceanddelicacy,ofwhichWashingtonwasinformed.The USstrategicpositioninthePacificwasstillrelativelyweak,theJapanesefleetverystrong.Amidthe ocean’smillionsofsquaremiles,mostwarshipstooktwenty-fourhourstotraversesixorseven hundredmiles.Withonlytwo,oratbestthree,operationalcarriersofhisown,Nimitzcouldnot dividehisforces.Ifhewishedtoengagetheenemy,hemustbettheranchonasinglerendezvous.A misjudgementabouttheintendeddestinationofthebulkofJapan’snavalairforcewouldbealmost impossibletoundointimetoavertanewdisasterforAmericanarms.AdmiralErnestKing,chiefof navaloperations,gavehisPacificC-in-Clittlehelpwiththedecision-making.WhileKingprofessed tofavourengagingtheJapanesewhereverpossible,hewaswaryofanycourseofactionthatmight inflictfurtherattritiononAmerica’sdangerouslysmallcarrierandcruiserforce. TheOfficeofNavalIntelligencestillthoughtthemostlikelyenemyobjectivewasJohnstonIsland, anatoll720mileswestofPearl;itwasafurtherreflectiononthenavy’slamentablecoordinationthat theONIdidnotknowthatRocheforthadalreadyidentifiedJohnstonasJapanesedesignation‘AG’. MeanwhiletheCaststationinMelbournethoughtYamamotowouldcommithismainforceagainstan islandintheMarshalls.LaytonclungtoabeliefthatPearlcouldbeatarget.RedmaninWashington, noadmirerofRochefort’sviewaboutanything,simplyrejectedthisone.BySaturday,16May, however,themanwhomatteredwasincreasinglyconvincedthatRochefortwasright.Nimitzaccepted thattheJapanesewereheadedforMidway,andhisjudgementwasconfirmedbyanimportantnew interceptthatday,givingthefly-offpositionfortheJapanesecarriers.Yetthistoofailedtoconvince WashingtonthatMidwaywastheirtarget.Rochefort,exasperated,dismissedRedmanandhis comradesas‘thoseclowns’–buttheywerealsohissuperiorofficers. Earlyon19Mayanimpromptuconferencetookplaceinthebasement,aroundthedeskofJasper Holmes.HowcouldthedoubtsaboutMidwaybedispelled?ItwasHolmeswhoconceivedasolution, whichwasimmediatelyadopted:thenavalairstationonMidwaywassentacipheredmessageby underseacable,instructingitsoperatorstosendaplain-languagewirelesssignaltoPearl,reporting difficultieswithitsdistillationplantandrequestingsuppliesoffreshwater.AnAmericannotinonthe secretexclaimedfuriously,‘ThosestupidbastardsonMidway,whatdotheymeanbysendingouta messagelikethisinplainlanguage?’Holmes’srusewasbrilliantlyjudged,however:thewaterissue wasjusttriflingenoughtobecrediblyflaggedinaplain-languagesignal,yetitssubstancewas sufficientlyinterestingtoJapaneseeyestomeritforwardingtonavalheadquarters. On20MaytheDungeon’sRedLasswellbroketheJapaneseoperationorderforMidway,though unknowntotheAmericans,thisdisclosedonlyapartofYamamoto’splan:theyhadnohintofthefact thathismainforceofbattleshipswouldtrailsixhundredmilesbehindthecarriergroup,poisedto closeinandfinishofftheUSPacificFleetwhenthisappearedontheMidwaybattlefield–asTokyo anticipatedthatitbelatedlywould.Nimitznowlaunchedaneffectivelittledeception:theseaplane tenderTangierwassenttoflyoffplanestostageatokenairraidonTulagi;thisperfectlyservedits purpose,convincingtheJapanesethataUScarriergroupmustbewithinrange,andthusthousandsof milesfromMidway. NextdaytheCastteaminMelbournedeclaredthatitwasnowpersuadedRochefortwasright.On 22MaytheBritishFarEastCombinedBureaualsoconcludedfromitsowndecryptactivitiesthat MidwaywastheJapaneseobjective.ButinWashington,RedmanandOp-20-Gwerefuriousthat RocheforthadpersuadedNimitztoundertakethewater-signalrusewithoutreferencetothem. Stimson,attheWarDepartment,saidtheUSArmystilldoubtedRochefort’sassessment,andfeared HypowasfallingvictimtoanelaborateJapanesedeception.Nimitzwroteuneasilyinhisown assessmenton26May:‘oursolesourceofinformationis[sigint]…Theenemymaybedeceiving us.’ ItishardtooverstatethepersonalstrainonRochefortinthosedays.Thisunloved,awkwardman wasmakingacaseagainstthejudgementofmostofhispeers,especiallyinWashington.Seldomin historyhassomuchhunguponthewordofasinglejuniorofficer.Ifhewaswrong,theUnitedStates couldsufferastrategicdisasterinthePacific.Onthemorningof27May,Rochefortdonnedaclean uniform:hewasscheduledtobriefNimitzandhisstaff.Justashewasabouttoleavethebasementfor theC-in-C’soffice,JoeFinneganandHamWrightbrokeasignalthatidentifiedthedatesofthe Japanesestrikes:3JuneagainsttheAleutians,the4thforMidway.ThiscausedRocheforttoarrive halfanhourlateforNimitz’smeeting,toacorrespondinglystonyreception.Hewastoldtodescribe whathethoughtheknew,withoutmentioninginthepresenceofofficersnotinonHypo’ssecretthe meansbywhichtheinformationhadbeensecured. HeoutlinedtheJapaneseplanfortwinstrikes,thoughmistakenlysuggestingthattheAleutians thrustwasamerediversion:inreality,itwasmuchmoresubstantial.Inconsequenceofthatwrong call,Nimitzsentonlycruisersanddestroyersnorthwards.ButthePacificC-in-Cmadethepivotal decisiontocommitallhisthreecarrierstomeettheenemyatMidway,justbeforeabitterblowstruck theAmericans.TheJapanesechangedtheircodes,introducingJN-25c.Thisdevelopmenthadbeen expected,buttheconsequencewastoslamshut,foraperiodofseveralweeks,Hypo’speepholeon themotionsoftheirfoes.Rochefortandhisteam,duringthedaysofelectrictensionbefore4June, wereobligedoncemoretorelysolelyupontrafficanalysisofenemytransmissions,andtherewere preciousfewofthese:Yamamotohadimposedwirelesssilenceonhisattackingforces. AmericancarelessnessjeopardisedNimitz’strap.Ashisshipssetforthtomeettheenemy,they talkedtoomuch:therewasasharpincreaseinUSNavywirelesstraffic,andtheJapanesenoticed.But Yamamotoscentedonlyamousewhenheshouldhavesmeltagiantrat.Inoneofhismajor misjudgementsofthewar,hedecidednottobreakwirelesssilencetoinformVice-AdmiralChuichi Nagumo,commandinghiscarriergroup,thattheAmericansmightbeuptosomething,perhapseven headingforMidway.Herewasamomentwhenacommander ’sfearoftheconsequencesof dispatchingastreamofMorseacrosstheetherprecipitatedaworseoutcomethanhadhedoneso.At Pearl,tensionrosetoanalmostunbearablelevelthroughthelonghoursof3June,asMidway’s reconnaissanceaircraftgainednoglimpseoftheexpectedenemyflat-tops.Then,at5.30a.m.next day,exactlyinaccordancewithRochefort’sprediction,atlastaCatalinaflying-boatsenta momentoussignal:theenemy’sprincipalcarrierforcewasinsight. TheAmericantriumphthatfollowedwasanythingbutordained.DestructionofNagumo’sfour carriers,thetransformationofthebalanceofthewarinthePacific,wasachievedbyphenomenalluck aswellastheskillandcourageoftheUSNavy’sdive-bomberpilots.WhileNimitzhadgambled courageouslytobringabouttheclash,theoutcomecouldhavegonedisastrouslytheotherway.Only on5JunedidHypodiscoverYamamoto’sbattleshipsclosinginonthescene,whichpromptedthe Americancarriergroupstobeatahastyandprudentretreat.ButMidwaywasaboveallelsean intelligencevictory,sharingwithBletchley’sbreachoftheGermanU-boatcodesthestatusofmost influentialWesternAlliedintelligenceachievementsofthewar.Nimitzrecognisedthiswhenhesenta cartobringRocheforttoattendhisowncelebrationparty.TheHypochief’sluckwasaslousyas ever:hearrivedonlyaftertheguestshaddispersed.ButNimitz,inthemidstofconductingastaff conference,usedtheopportunitytopaytributetothecodebreaker:‘Thisofficerdeservesamajor shareofthecreditforthevictoryatMidway.’ ThosewordsweretobeRochefort’sonlyreward.WhenhewasproposedforaDistinguished ServiceMedal,thecitationwasquashedbyRear-AdmiralRussellWillson,theCNO’schiefofstaff:‘I donotconcurintherecommendation…hehasmerelyefficientlyusedthetoolspreviouslyprepared forhisuse.Itwouldbeinappropriatetoawardamedalonlytotheofficerwhohappenedtobeina positiontoreapthebenefits,ataparticulartime,unlessinactualcombatwiththeenemy.’Jasper Holmeswroteofthepost-MidwaymoodintheDungeon:‘therewasnogreatmomentof exhilaration’.RochefortenjoyedonemoreimportantsuccessaschiefofHypo:herevealedthe JapaneselandingonGuadalcanalon5July,whichprecipitatedadramaticandultimatelytriumphant Americanripostewithland,seaandairforces.HewasalsoabletoalertMacArthur ’scommandtothe JapaneseattempttocrosstheOwenStanleyrangeandfallonPortMoresby. SofarasWashingtonwasconcerned,however,farfromRochefortbeingdubbedtheheroof Midway,hewassimplyaninsubordinatecusswhomnobodyliked.On14October1942hewas relievedofhispostandassignedtocommandafloatingdrydockinSanFrancisco.Hewassucceeded byCaptainWilliamGoggins,anofficerwithnopreviousexperienceofcryptanalysis,whowas deemedacompetentadministrator.Althoughallhierarchiescommitsomearbitraryinjustices,this wasanexceptionallybrutalandmean-spiritedone.Intheautumnof1944Rochefortgainedsufficient rehabilitationtobeputincommandofthePacificStrategicIntelligenceUnit,buthediedundecorated in1976.Onlyin1985washeposthumouslyawardedtheDistinguishedServiceMedalthathadbeen deniedhimin1942. ItwasasortofmiraclethatRochefortandhisteamachievedwhattheydid,withthemakeshift resourcesavailable.Thearmy–navyfeudwhichcausedtheUSforsolongtodivideitscodebreaking operationswasworsenedbythelowpriorityaccordedtointelligence.By1942,Bletchleyandthe Britishserviceintelligencedepartmentsdeployedhundredsofthefinestcivilianbrainsinthecountry alongsideahandfulofcareerprofessionalsoldiers,sailorsandairmen,togetherwithtechnologyin advanceofanythingbeingusedbyHypoorCast.Rochefortwasmerelyahighlyexperienced,not personallybrilliantcrypto-linguistandanalyst,andhisteamwasagroupofhithertolowlyregarded navalofficers. Thepost-warnarrativeoftheUSNavy’sPacificCombatIntelligenceCenterstatedbluntly:‘Inthe defensivestagesofthewar[1941–43]radiointelligencewasnotonlythemostimportantsourceof intelligenceintheCentralPacific,itwaspracticallytheonlysource.Therewereveryfewcaptured documentsorprisonersofwar.Therewerenophotographsofenemypositions…Excludingthe SolomonsandNewBritain,spiesandcoast-watchers’reportsneversuppliedanyimportant intelligence.’TheoperationaldiaryoftheJapanesenavygeneralstaffrecordedbitterlyafterMidway: ‘theenemyhadgraspedourintentionsbeforehand’.ButnotforamomentdidYamamotoorhis officersconsiderthepossibilitythattheircipherswerecompromised;theyattributedthedisaster merelytothemischancethattheircarriershadbeenspottedbyAmericanreconnaissanceaircraftor submarines. JoeRochefortwasnotpersonallyindispensable.AfterhisdeparturetheUSNavy’sintelligenceand codebreakingoperationsbecameevermoresophisticatedandeffective,althoughthedifficultiesof breakingJN-25’svariantspersisteduntil1944,andsometimesevenbeyond.Thecottageindustryof 1941–42becameFRUPAC–FleetIntelligenceRadioUnitPacific–adepartmentemployingfive hundredmen,aformidabletoolinNimitz’shand.ButRochefortdeservestoberememberedasaman whochangedhistory,whilethehonouroftheUSNavywastarnishedbythescurvyingratitudewith whichitschiefsrewardedhim. 6 MuddlingandGroping:TheRussiansatWar 1 C ENTR E M O BI LI S ES NoonewhocherishesillusionsabouttheskillandomniscienceofRussia’ssecretservicescould sustaintheseafterstudyingtheirwartimerecord.Itwascertainlynobetter,andinmostrespects worse,thanthatoftheWesterndemocracies.Hitler ’sinvasionon22June1941precipitatedacrisis forStalin’sintelligenceorganisations,whichliketheRedArmyhadbeencrippledbythePurges. PavelSudoplatov’srewardfororganisingTrotsky’skillinginAugust1940,togetherwithhis unflinchingparticipationinmanyotherliquidations,wasanappointmentamonthafterthestartof ‘Barbarossa’toheadtheNKVD’s‘AdministrationforSpecialTasks’,officiallyresponsiblefor ‘sabotage,kidnappingandassassinationofenemies’,ajobdescriptionworthyofIanFleming’s novels.SudoplatovhandedBeriaalistof140intelligenceofficersconfinedinprisonsorthegulag forpoliticaloffenceswhoseserviceswerenowvitallyneededbythestate,eithertospyortorun spies.Henotedthatthefilesshowedallthosenamedtohavebeendetainedonthepersonalordersof eitherStalinorMolotov.Now,Beriaaskednoquestionsabouttheprisoners’guiltorinnocence, merelydemanding,‘Areyousureweneedthem?’Thenewheadofspecialtasksresponded,‘Yes,I amabsolutelycertain,’andwasorderedtoarrangetheirrelease.Unfortunately,asSudoplatov observedunemotionallyinhismemoirs,threeofthebestmenprovedalreadytohavebeenexecuted. Theremainderreturnedtointelligenceduties,invaryingconditionsofreliefandtrauma. IfthelivesoftheNKVD’sofficerswereprecarious,theyalsoenjoyedtheperquisitesthataccrued tofavouredservantsoftheSovietstate–forinstance,thechildrenof‘illegals’operatingabroadwere admittedtouniversitieswithoutbeingrequiredtopassentranceexams.Sudoplatovoccupieda relativelyspaciousapartmentabovetheDynamosportsstoreonGorkyStreet,inablockexclusively tenantedbytheKremlin’ssecretsoldiers,includingforeignintelligencechiefVsevolodMerkulov. AftertheJune1941massreleaseofpoliticalsuspectstoresumeintelligencework,severalmovedin temporarilywithSudoplatov,theirdeliverer.OnenightMerkulovsuddenlytelephonedtoannounce thathewascomingdowntotalk.Thenewly-liberatedofficerswerehastilyherdedintohidinginthe bedroom,lesttheirpresencepromptembarrassment.Sudoplatovhadsufficientsenseofselfpreservationtohavetakencarenottosigntheirrehabilitationdocumentspersonally.Insteadhegot Fitintodoso–which,hesaid,probablysavedhislifein1946,whenhisownsurvivalhungbya thread. Theintelligenceofficersrescuedfromthegulagrejoicedintheirfreedom,insomecasestoosoon. Oneofthem,IvanKavinsky,dancedaboutSudoplatov’sflatinthethree-piecesuitwithwhichhehad beenissuedinplaceofprisondenims.Howwonderfulitwas,Kavinskyexulted,tobeacknowledged atlastasapatriot.Hourslater,hewasdispatchedtoserveasastay-behindagentinZhitomir,deepin Ukraine,whichwasabouttobeoverrunbytheGermans.There,hewasalmostimmediatelybetrayed byUkrainians,asmanyotherservantsofMoscowwerebetrayed.Arrivingatarendezvousand sensingatrap,Kavinskyshothimself.Theremainderofhiscellperishedinasubsequentgunbattle withtheGestapo.InthesamefashionseveralotherimportantNKVDresidentswereswiftlyeliminated bytheGermans.OneofBeria’smostcynicalruseswascarriedoutinAugust1941:NKVDagents disguisedasNaziparachutistsweredroppedintotheVolgaGermanautonomousregion,totestthe loyaltyofitscitizens.Villageswherethenewarrivalswereofferedshelterwereliquidatedwholesale; theentireregion’ssurvivingpopulationwaseventuallydeportedtoSiberiaandKazakhstan. Someintelligenceofficersliberatedforwarservicehadsufferedunimaginablehorrorsinjailsof thekindtowhichtheyhadbeenaccustomedtodispatchothers.DmitriBystroletov,apre-waragenthandlerinBerlin,wastorturedwithaball-bearingswungonasteelcable.Aftersigningaconfession, in1939hewassentencedtotwentyyears’imprisonment.HiswifeShelmatovawassenttothegulag, wheresheslitherthroatwithakitchenknife;Bystroletov’selderlymothermeanwhilepoisoned herself.Itishardtosupposethatrehabilitationnowsecuredhimmuchhappiness.Anothersuchfigure wasPyotrZubov,whohadbeendisgracedforfailingtocarrythroughanattemptedcoupin Yugoslavia.Since1939SudoplatovhadbeenurgingZubov’squalitiesasanintelligenceofficer– withoutmentioningtheman’simportantroleinBeria’sascenttopower.Inprisonherefusedto confesstonon-existentcrimesagainstthestate,evenafterhiskneesweresmashedwithahammer, renderinghimalifelongcripple.ZubovwasconfinedinthesameLubyankacellasCol.Stanislas Sosnowski,formerheadofPolishintelligenceinBerlin,andhiscompatriotPrinceJanuszRadziwiłł. TheNKVDsetaboutturningbothfortheirownpurposes,andZubov’sroleinachievingthisenabled Sudoplatovtosecurehisrelease.Zubovbecameoneofhissectionheads,limpingandshuffling aroundtheLubyanka. SosnowskistartedworkingfortheRussians,whosoughttoexploithisoldsourcesinBerlin,most ofthemwomen.HisoldnetworkhadbeenbrokenupbytheNazisbackin1935,whenhehimselfwas imprisonedforespionage,thenobligedtowitnesstheguillotiningofhisagentsatPlötzenseejail.He waseventuallyexchangedfortheleaderoftheGermanminoritycommunityinPoland,butwas sackedfollowingafinancialscandal.HewaslivinginretirementwhentheRussiansscoopedhimup duringtheir1939invasion.HeclaimedjusttwosurvivingGermansources,andreactivatedtheseat theNKVD’sbidding.Sudoplatovassertedthatheprovidedsomevalueforhisjailersuntil1942,and thereafterwaskeptintheLubyankafortheusualSovietreason:‘Hewasamanwhoknewtoomuch.’ PrinceRadziwiłł,aformerconservativepolitician,sixtyyearsold,washandledpersonallyby Beria,becausehewasthoughttohavefriendsinNazihighplaces,amongthemGöring.Oncethe NKVDwassatisfiedthathewasunderitscontrol,RadziwiłłwaspermittedtoreturntoBerlin.Beria toldhim,‘Peoplelikeyou,Prince,willalwaysbeneededbyus.’ButtheRussiansoverestimatedthe nobleman’sintimacywiththeReichsmarschall,andindeedhisintelligencevaluegenerally.Hebroke contactwithMoscowin1942,andpaidthepricethreeyearslater,whenoncemorehefellinto Russianhands,thistimewithhiswife,whodiedinaSovietprison.Thefamily’svastpossessions wereconfiscatedbythenewPolishcommuniststate. Evenmoresothantheplotsofmostintelligenceservices,thoseoftheNKVDlurchedbetweenthe imaginativeandtheridiculous.Inthewinterof1941,atStalin’spersonalbehestaplanwasdevised forthekillingofHitler,involvingbothPrinceRadziwiłłandOlgaChekhova,actressnieceofthe playwright,whowasaSovietagent,albeitanineffectualone,livinginBerlin.Theprincipalassassin wastobeanNKVD‘illegal’namedIgorMiklashevsky,aformerboxingchampion.InDecember 1941hesucceededingainingaccesstoGermany,posingasadefector.Hisauthenticityinthisrole wasattestedbyhisuncle,agenuineexiledopponentofStalin. Miklashevsky’ssubsequentcareeralmostdefiesbelief.HefoughtaboutwithGermany’sheroMax Schmeling,whichhecontrivedtowin.HereportedtoMoscowthatwhileitseemedimpossibleto reachHitler,itwouldbeeasytoassassinateGöring.Centrerejectedthisproposal,forGöring’s removalseemedmorelikelytoassisttheNaziwareffortthantheSovietone.Miklashevskyremained inGermanyuntil1944,whenhemurderedhisuncleandescapedtoFrance.Stalinmeanwhile withdrewhisorderforHitler ’sassassination,fearinghisremovalwouldprompttheWesternAlliesto seekaseparatepeacewithasuccessorGermanleadership.AftertheliberationofFrance MiklashevskyspenttwoyearsintheWesthuntingdownUkrainianrenegadesofHitler ’swartime ‘Vlasovarmy’,thenreturnedtoMoscow,whereheboxeduntilhisretirement. AstheGermansclosedinonMoscow,theNKVDstruggledtoorganisestay-behindespionage groupsagainsttheeventualityofthecapital’sfall.Theypreparedkeyinstallationsfordemolition, includingPolitburomembers’dachas.SomanyNKVDstaffhadquittheLubyankathatSudoplatov’s SpecialTasksgrouptookoversomeofficesforthesaboteurs.ZoyaRybkina,whowasoneofthem, describedhowsafeswereclearedofsecretfilesandinsteadcrammedwithweapons,ammunition, compasses,explosives,fusesandevenMolotovcocktails.Duringthehoursofdarkness,teamsset forthtoburyarmsdumpsinthecity’sparks.‘Wedidnotgohomeforahundreddays,’wrote Rybkina,‘sleepinginsteadinairraidshelterswithagasmaskcaseinplaceofapillow.’Eachstaybehindgroupwasorganisedasa‘family’,witha‘grandpa’or‘grandma’asitshead–usuallyanold BolshevikchosenbytheveteranColonelGeorgyMordinov;somewereveteransoftheInternational BrigadeinSpain,thoughmostofthesewereformerspiesnowtoooldformilitaryservice.Radio- operatorsandcipherclerkswereappointedastheir‘grandsons’and‘granddaughters’.Rybkinaonce calledatMordinov’sapartmentinBegovaya,andfoundtheoldrevolutionaryasleeponabed composedoftrotylexplosiveblocks. Seniorofficersdespairedofamassingsufficientchargestominethelargeststructures,forinstance theDynamostadiumandrailstations.SudoplatovclaimedinhismemoirsthatSpecialTaskscould callupontheservicesofamotorisedbrigadeof20,000menandwomen,includingtwohundred foreignersofmanynationalities–Germans,Austrians,Spaniards,Americans,Chinese,Vietnamese, Poles,Czechs,Bulgarians,Romanians.Healsoboastedofaparatroopunitonpermanentstandbyto counterattackanyGermancommandoattack–forinstance,againsttheKremlin–withitsown squadronoftransportaircraft.SomeoftheUSSR’sfinestathleteshadbeendraftedintoservice,and someofthesewerepromptlydesignatedforpartisanoperations,workinginplacesandcircumstances wheresupremefitnessandhardinesswereneeded. Sudoplatovfailstoacknowledge,however,thatmostoftheseeliteunitsbecameavailableonlylater inthewar:inthewinterof1941theNKVDwasreducedtopitifulimprovisations.ARussianofficer recordedthecaseofoneofthousandsof‘line-crossers’deployedatthistime,aprettyyoung UkrainiangirlnamedOksana.TheSovietTwelfthArmyseveraltimesdispatchedherthroughthe enemyfrontintheDonbasin.Shewaseventuallydenounced,however,ashavinggoneovertothe Axis.Afterinterrogationsheadmittedthatshehadbeencaught,andchosetosaveherownlifeby ‘acceptingtheprotection’ofanItalianofficer.TheSoviettribunalwhichtriedherallegedlywaived thedeathpenaltyandinsteadgaveheralongprisonsentence,butalmostallsuchpeopleofbothsexes weresummarilyexecuted.Itishardtocreditthatmercywasshowninthiscase,atthisworstofall timesforSovietfortunes. Withthenewimportanceofspecialforces,SudoplatovroseintheSoviethierarchy.InFebruary 1942hebecameacommissarofstatesecurityandlieutenant-general,andinAugusttravelledwith BeriaandMerkulovattheheadofanNKVDmissiontotheCaucasus,flyinginAmerican-suppliedC47stoarrangetheblockageofmountainpassesandstay-behindsabotageoperations.TheSpecial Taskschiefadmittedlaterthathavingnomilitarytraining,hefeltoutofhisdepthatawarfront.So didhisfollowers,whohadbeenchosenfortheirskillsasmountaineersratherthanassoldiers:those whostayedtofightintheCaucasussufferedheavylosses.BeriasuggestedthatProfessorKonstantin Gamsakhurdia,aprominentlocalintellectual,shouldbedesignatedtoheadtheCaucasusgroups. Sudoplatovthoughtthiswasaterribleidea:GamsakhurdiawasonlyontheNKVD’sbooksbecausehe hadbeenblackmailedintoserviceasaninformeryearsearlier,througharashattachmenttothe Georgiannationalistmovement.NowhemettheprofessoratTbilisi’sIntouristhotel,andwas unimpressed:‘Heappearedtomeunreliable,andbesideshisexperienceasanagentwasnotin inspiringpeople,onlyinformingonthem.Hewastoopreoccupiedwithwritingversesandwhathe believedtobegreatnovelsintheGeorgianlanguagesuchasAbductionoftheMoon,amediaeval saga.’ SudoplatovpreferredfortheleadershiprolealocalplaywrightnamedGeorgiMachivariani,who wasentrustedwithasmallfortuneingoldandsilvertofinancepartisanoperations.Intheevent TbilisiwasnevertakenbytheGermans.Afterthetideofwarhadturned,theNKVDchiefdescribed hisamazementwhenMachivarianirefundedhistreasureundiminished,thoughhedoesnotspeculate aboutwhetherhisconductreflectedhonestyorterror.WhenBeriaandhisdeputiesreturnedto Moscow,Stalinreprimandedthemforhavingventuredintoacombatzone.Heneededhisspymasters closertohome. 2 TH E END O F S O R GE JapanassumedapivotalimportanceafterGermanyinvadedtheSovietUnion,adevelopmentwhich deeplydistressedRichardSorge,asallthosearoundhimobserved.Moscowneededtheanswertoa criticalstrategicquestion:wouldtheJapaneseseizetheopportunitytostrikeatRussiafromtheeast, forcingtheRedArmytofightontwofronts?Sorge’sinformantHotsumiOzakiwieldedsignificant influencethroughhismembershipoftwogovernmentadvisorygroups,uponbothofwhichheurged thatJapanshouldmovesouth,againsttheEuropeans,ratherthanagainsttheRussians.On29June MaxClausenwirelessedtoMoscowaSorgemessagereportingthatJapanwasstagingatest mobilisationforwarwithRussia,butthatprimeministerKonoyeremainedopposedtobelligerence. Theoperator ’smentalhealthcannothavebeenimprovedbyaroutinevisitfromtheKempeitai militarypoliceduringthistransmission. On10July,SorgetoldMoscowthatwhileJapanwouldcontinuecontingencypreparationsforwar withtheUSSR,themainthrustofitspolicywouldbetopursuenegotiationswiththeUnitedStatesand toplanforwarwiththeEuropeanempires.TokyowouldattacktheSovietUniononlyifitscollapse seemedimminent.Nonetheless,itisimportanttonotethatthewordingofhisdispatchesremained equivocalandinconclusive.TheyreflectedthefactthatwhileSorgeandWenneker,theGermannaval attaché,thoughtJapanwouldnotfightRussiain1941,Ottandhismilitaryattachédisagreed, believingthatTokyowouldbecomeabelligerentbyautumn.SorgeseveraltimesassertedthatJapan wouldprobablybetippedintoattackingtheSovietUnionbythefallofLeningradandMoscow,butat notimedidheexplicitlyanduncompromisinglyassureMoscowthatRussiawassafefromany Japanesethreat.Contrarily,hereportedthehighcommand’sconvictionthattheWehrmachtwould enterRussia’scapitalwithinweeks–whichwouldalmostcertainlyprompttheJapanesetoattackthe reelingSovietsfromtheeast. ForyearsitwasclaimedthatSorge’sintelligencechangedthecourseofhistory,byenablingStalin toshiftmajorformationsfromtheEast,tochecktheNazionslaughtintheautumnandwinterof1941. Intruth,sucharedeploymentbeganasearlyasMay.AmodernRussiansourceassertsthatMoscow Centrereceivedinformationfrommanyforeignsourcesinthelatterpartof1941confirmingthat JapanhadnointentionofattackingRussia,allegedlyonthebasisofdocumentsintheMoscow intelligencearchive.On17July,theNKVDinLondonsentthetextofaBletchleydecryptofa telegramfromtheJapaneseForeignMinistry,announcingthedecisionofanimperialconferencenot tojoinHitler ’sattackontheSovietUnion.TheTokyospy’sdispatchesmayhaveincreasedthe Stavka’swillingnesstoreducetheRedArmy’sAsianforces,butasinallmattersrelatingto intelligence,manysourcesandfactorsinfluencedStalin’sdecision,andthecodebreakingoperation describedbelowmayalsohaveplayedapart.Thereportsofspies,howeverwellplacedandhowever romantictheirstories,canneveroffernationalleaderscertainty,norevenprobability.J.C. Masterman,orchestralconductoroftheBritishDoubleCrosssystem,haswritten:‘Itisamistaketo supposethatthewell-placedperson,friendly,letussay,withaCabinetministeroranofficialinthe ForeignOfficeorahighlyplacedstaffofficerisnecessarilyinthehighestgradeofagents.The individualremarksofministersorgeneralsdonotcarrymuchconviction,anditisatruismof historicalresearchthatwhendealingwithdiplomaticconversationsandtherumoursofembassies,we areintheveryrealmoflies.’ NomorethananyotheragentcouldSorgecompletestrategicjigsawpuzzles,norevenprovide piecesinthesamefashionasdidsignaldecryptsorcapturedenemydocuments.Hecouldmerely offercluesandpointers,forinstanceaboutthedispositionsoftheJapanesearmy,thoughOzaki achievedanimportantcoupbysecuringdetailsofJapan’spetroleumreserves.InJuly,Ottdispatched SorgetoShanghaitoinvestigatetheprospectsofamediatedJapan–Chinapeace.Onhisreturn, Hanakosaidthatshehadbeenquestionedabouthimbythepolice.Whenanofficervisitedthehouse againshortlyafterwards,Sorgewasangryenoughtohittheman.Heescapedarrestfortheassault, butitisplainthathewasclosetoanervousbreakdown. HereportedtoMoscowthattheJapanesehadbeenreinforcingtheirtroopsinManchuria,butever moreofhismaterialwasfailingtoreachtheGRU–forinstance,asignificantmessageabout shrinkingJapanesepetrolstocks–becauseClausencouldnothandlethestackofmessagesawaiting encryptionandtransmission.On20August,however,asignaldidgettoitsdestination,sayingthat Japan’smilitaryleadershipwasstillunwillingtoenterthewar,pendingdecisiveGermansuccessin theWest,butthisended–again,inconclusively–‘Japanmightnotjointhewarthisyear,althoughthe decisionhasnotyetbeentaken.’InAugustalso,OzakivisitedManchuriainhisroleasanimportant advisertotherailwaymanagement.On14SeptemberthisyieldedareporttotheRussiansthatthe JapanesewerereducingtheirimmediatemilitarycommitmentinManchuria,butwerebuildinganew strategicroadtothefrontierinpreparationforapossiblewarwiththeSovietUnionin1942.On Saturday,4October,afurthermessagestatedthatanearlyJapaneseattackonRussiawasnowhighly unlikely.ThisprovedtobethelasttransmissionMaxClausenevermade. On10October1941theTokkosecuritypolicearrestedfirstTomoKitabayashi,thenYotoku Miyagi,bothformermembersoftheAmericanCommunistParty.Inthelatter ’sroomsearchers foundareportonJapan’soilstocks,unlikelyreadingmaterialforaprofessionalartist.Duringhis interrogation,Miyagisuddenlysprangtohisfeetandleaptoutofawindow,inasuicidebid.Hefell twostoreys,asdidapoliceofficerwhojumpedinpursuit.Bothmensurvived.Underfurther questioningMiyagitoldallheknew,revealingthenamesofClausen,Voukelitch,Ozaki–andSorge. AtfirsttheTokkoflatlydeclinedtoconsiderarrestingthelastofthese,becauseofhisstatusasa prominentmemberoftheGermanembassycommunity.On15October,however,Ozakiwasarrested athishome,andatMeguropolicestationbegantotalkalmostimmediately.Hebecameoutspokento hisinquisitors,declaringconfidentlyonthe18thwhentheTojogovernmentsucceededthatofPrince Konoye:‘ThiscabinetistheonewhichisgoingtowaragainsttheUnitedStates.’Clausen,Voukelitch andSorgewereallarrestedintheirhomesonthatsameday.Thewireless-operatormadenoattempt todestroyhiscodes,andhadpreservedcopiesofscoresofmessageshehadtransmitted.Insteadof killingthemselves,astheircaptorsexpected,mostoftheprisonerstalkedtheirheadsoff.Itremains disputedwhetherthiswasaconsequenceoftortureor–quiteplausibly–becausetheyweremorally exhausted.AllwerequestionedinEnglish. Sorge,alone,initiallyheldout.HewasvisitedbyEugenOtt,whowasnotmerelyfuriouslyangry withtheJapanesepolice,butalsostubbornlydisbelievingofhisfriend’sguilt–asheremainedinto oldage.On24October,however,thespysuddenlybroke.Hewrotewithapencil:‘Ihavebeenan internationalCommunistsince1925,’thenburstintotears.Hisinterrogators,overwhelmedbythe compulsivefloodofdisclosuresthatfollowed,providedhimwithatypewriter.Hesetabout composingadetailednarrativeofhisexperiences,mostofwhichwassubsequentlydestroyedinthe 1945Tokyofire-bombing.HeaskedhisjailerstocontacttheRussiansandattempttoarrangean exchange,aproposalwhichelicitedastonyresponsefromtheSovietembassy.TheGermanmission succumbedtoasustainedtrauma,shockwavesfromwhichreachedBerlin.TheGestapo’sJoseph Meisingerwasdisgracedforhisegregiousfailureassecurityofficer,andWalterSchellenbergwas reprimandedbyHimmler.Ottwassummarilyrecalled,andHitlerinformed.Yetinaccordancewith theerraticconductoftyrannies,theFührerchosenottoexactdrasticpenalties.Theambassador suffereddismissal,butescapedtheexecutionerswhowouldsurelyhaveawaitedhiminMoscow,had hebeenStalin’sservant. ThespiesmeanwhilelanguishedinTokyoprisons.DuringtheSecondWorldWartheJapanese behavedwithinstitutionalisedbarbaritytowardsvastnumbersofenemiesintheirpower.Itisbizarre, therefore,thattheTokkoandthejusticesystemappeartohavetreatedRichardSorgeandmostofthe membersofhisringrelativelyhumanely,thoughtheyspenttheensuingthreeyearsinprisoncells. Whileallwererepeatedlyandsometimesharshlyinterrogated,thereisnoevidencethattheywere tortured,asTokyo’sprisonersweresooftentortured;noneoftheirfamilymembersorassociates werepersecutedorkilled.Japaneserestraintwasprobablypromptedbyareluctancegratuitouslyto provokeMoscow,atatimewhenTokyowasincreasinglydesperatetoavoidwaronanewfront. VoukelitchdiedinprisononHokkaidoon13January1945,butClausensurvivedthewarandwas releasedon8Octoberthatyear.HeflewtoMoscow,andthereafterlivedinretirementwithhiswifein EastGermany. ThetrialsofSorgeandOzakidraggedonuntilSeptember1943,whenthetwomenbecamethe onlymembersoftheringtoreceivecapitalsentences.Thesewerecarriedouton7November1944, atTokyo’sSugamoprison.Itsgovernor,KikuyasaIchijima,attendedindressuniform.Ozakichose todonablackceremonialkimonoandblacktabibeforehewashoodedandbound.Fourexecutioners sprangthetraptogether,sothatnoonemanboretheresponsibilityforkillinganother–this,inthe midstofawarinwhichtensofmillionswerebeingslaughtered.Sorgewasthensummoned,wearing darktrousers,anopen-neckedshirtandloosejacket.Thegovernordemandedformally:‘Areyou RichardSorge?’andthecondemnedmanassented.Thenheasked,‘Isittoday?’anditwasthe governor ’sturntonod.SorgestatedthathewishedhispropertytogotoAnnaClausen,wifeofhis wireless-operator,andshedulyreceivedtheyenequivalentofsomeUS$4,000–Hanako’sslavish loyaltytohimwasnotreciprocated.Hewasofferedtheritualteaandcakes,whichhedeclined,asking insteadforacigarette.Thegovernorsaidthiswasagainsttherules.TheattendingTokkoofficer urgedallowingthislastrequest,butIchijimawasfirm. Sorgeremainedcalmashewasbound,thencriedoutinhaltingJapanese,‘Sakigun!’–theRed Army;‘KokusaiKyosanto!’–theInternationalCommunistParty;‘SovietKyosanto!’–theSoviet CommunistParty.TheTokkowitnesssaidlaterthathespokelikeamanutteringaprayer.Other versionsofSorge’slastwordshavebeensuggested,butthisoneseemsthemostcredible:hesought todignifythelaboursofhislifeatitsending,andspokeinthelanguagewhichwouldensurethathe wasunderstood.At10.20a.m.thetrapwassprung,andafternineteenminuteshewaspronounced dead.NeithertheGermannortheSovietembassywantedanythingtodowithhisbody,andthusitwas committedtotheprisongraveyard. Likemostsecretagents,RichardSorgewasanabnormalhumanbeing,whogainedanemotional chargefromhiscomplexexistenceandmultipledeceits.Hehadmorethanalittleincommonwith KimPhilby–charmandastreakofrecklessnesswhichrenderedastonishingthelongevityofboth menintheirroles.Sorgeretainscelebritybecausehewasaremarkablepersonality,andalsobecause veryfewspies,andcertainlynowartimeBritish,AmericanorGermanagent,gainedsuchaccessto highplaces.Itismuchmoredoubtful,however,thathealonechangedanyhistory:‘Allthingsare alwaysonthemovesimultaneously.’ 3 TH E S EC O ND S O UR C E ThearrestofRichardSorgeandthebreak-upofhisnetworkisoftensupposedtohavemarkedthe endofSovietpenetrationofwartimeJapan.Yetthiswasnotthecase.Centrehadanotherimportant sourceonTokyo’saffairs–andpossiblyalsoaccesstosomeofitscodes.CaptainSergeiTolstoy,the JapanesespecialistintheNKVD’sFifth(Cipher)Directorate,becamethemostdecoratedSoviet cryptanalystofthewar,closelyfollowedbyBorisAronsky.SomemodernRussianwriterssuggest thatTolstoy’steamthusprovidedtheKremlinwithinformationaboutTokyo’sintentionsbasedon betterauthoritiesthanSorgeoffered.InOctoberandNovember1941eightSovietrifledivisions,a thousandtanksandathousandaircraftweremovedtotheWesternFront.TheRussiansclaimtohave reada27NovemberinstructionfromTokyotoBaronŌshimainBerlin:‘seeHitlerandRibbentrop, andexplaintotheminsecretourrelationswiththeUnitedStates…ExplaintoHitlerthatthemain Japaneseeffortswillbeconcentratedinthesouthandthatweproposetorefrainfromdeliberate operationsinnorth[againsttheSovietUnion].’ThissignalwasallegedlyforwardedtoMoscowby KimPhilby,viatheNKVD’sLondonstation.Allthatseemscertainisthatinthemonthsfollowingthe onsetof‘Barbarossa’theRussianshadplentyofinformantsotherthanSorgetellingthemthattheir easternflankwassafe. TheyneverremotelymatchedtheachievementsofBletchley,ArlingtonHallandOp-20-G,because theywereincapableofbuildingbombes,andwouldneverhavelicensedthesortofyoungiconoclasts wholedtheBritishoperation.Westerncryptographicexpertsalsoarguethat,tohavereadPurple consistently,theywouldneedtohavematchedtheAmericanachievementinbuildingareplicaofthe machine,forwhichSoviettechnologicalskillswerealmostcertainlyinadequate,andforwhichthe Russianshaveneverproducedevidence–theGermans’OKW/ChifailedtobreakPurple.Itisnot unlikelythatTokyo’scabletoŌshimawaspassedtoMoscowfromWashingtonorLondonbyan AmericanorBritishtraitor,ratherthanbrokenbytheFifthDirectorate. YettheRussianshadmoresuccessinreadingatleastlowerenemywirelesstrafficthanis sometimesrecognised.ThereisnownodoubtthatvaluablecodingmaterialwasprovidedtoCentre byaJapaneseinformant,IzumiKozo,whosestorydeservestobebetterknown.Hewasanunusually giftedlinguistwhospokebothRussianandEnglish.Attheageofthirty-threein1925,hewasposted tohiscountry’snewlyopenedMoscowembassy.Herentedaroomfromageneral’swidownamed ElizavetaPerskaya,whosedaughterElenawasaliteraturegraduatewhoworkedinthelibraryofthe InternalAffairsMinistry.KozofellinlovewithElena,andtheyweremarriedtwoyearslater.The wholefamilywas,inevitably,onthebooksoftheOGPU,notleastbecauseElizaveta’ssonhadbeen executedforanti-Bolshevikactivities. ItseemsalmostcertainthatElenawasorderedbyacaseofficertostartarelationshipwithKozo. WhenhewasrepostedtotheJapaneseconsulateinHarbin,hiswife,mother-in-lawandababyboy accompaniedhim.Thereafter,however,ElenabrokeoffcontactwiththeNKVDandwasdeprivedof herSovietcitizenship.WhenhermotherElizavetawasrashenoughtoreturntoMoscow,shewas promptlyarrestedandsentencedtotenyears’imprisonmentforespionage.Aseconddaughter,Vera, wasshotalongwithherhusband,thoughthefamilywastoldthatshewasconfinedinapsychiatric hospital.ItishardtobelievethattheKozofamilydiscoveredmanycausesformirthintheirlives. In1935IzumibecamethirdsecretaryattheJapaneseembassyinPrague.Twoyearslater,Elena presentedherselfatthelocalSovietembassytodeliveraformalrequestforhercitizenshiptobe restoredsoshecouldreturnhomeandbringuphersoninMoscow.Theboywasnot,shesaid,the sonofKozo,thoughthediplomathadadoptedhimassuch.MoscowCentreconsideredthisproposal. Thetroubledwomanwasaskedifherhusbandworkedinintelligence;shesaidsheonlyknewthathe hadbeenlearningFrenchandGerman,andspentalotoftimereadingtheRussianémigrépress.The NKVD’sverdictwasthatitshandlersshouldreopencontactwithElena,inhopesofsecuringaccessto Japan’sdiplomaticcodes.Theyhadtwolevers:whateverElenafeltaboutherhusband,hewas passionatelycommittedtobothherandtheboy;moreover,hedeploredJapan’saggressiveforeign policy. CashprovidedafurthermotivetoMrsIzumi,ifnottoherhusband:atameetinginPragueon3 May1938,ElenaofferedsevenJapanesecodebooksfor£10,000,andwhenthisdealwasrejectedshe tookthematerialbacktotheembassy.InSeptembersherenewedthenegotiation,thistimeaskingfor £5,000and£100amonth.Itremainsuncertainhowmuchshefinallyreceived,buttheNKVD’sPrague residentdulyreceivedsevencodebooksandassortedsecrettelegramswhichwerewelcomedin Moscow,andappeartohaveenabledtheSovietstoreadsomeTokyodiplomatictraffic.Amidthe post-Munichcrisis,JapaneseembassyfamilieswereevacuatedtoFinland,butKozoremainedin PragueuntillateOctober.Thoughnotaprofessionalintelligenceofficer,hewasperformingsome intelligencetasks,andwassoonabletodiverttohisNKVDcaseofficertelegramsanddetailsof Tokyo’slocalagents.On4Octoberhedeliveredabatchoftwenty-fivemessagesfromBerlin, twenty-ninefromLondon,thirteenfromRomeandfifteenfromMoscow.Aweeklaterheprovideda memorandumontheorganisationofJapaneseintelligenceabroad.TheNKVDremainedcautious aboutKozo,however,anddecidedtoworkchieflythroughhiswife,whomtheywereconfidentthey couldcontrol.TheveteranintelligenceofficerZoyaRybkinawaspostedtoHelsinkitohandleher. Attheirfirstmeeting,ElenabesoughtRybkinatobeallowedtoreturnhome,butMoscowdecided thiswasunacceptable,becauseherdeparturewouldbeboundtorouseTokyo’ssuspicionofKozo. Throughmuchof1939theJapanesediplomat–codenamed‘Nero’–channelledastreamofreports totheNKVDviaElena,aboutJapan’sintentionstoseekamilitaryalliancewithGermany,including detailsofaconferenceinBerlinaboutajointintelligenceassaultonRussia.Kozohadjustbeenasked fordetailsoftheJapaneseWarMinistry’snewcodewhentheRusso–Finnishwarerupted,andcontact waslostuntilthespringof1940.ThediplomatwasthenpostedtoSofia,whereonefinemorning ElenaarrivedunannouncedattheSovietembassy,anddemandedtoseetheNKVDresident.Shetold himherhusbandwashappytoresumehisactivitiesonbehalfofMoscow,butthatsheherselfwanted todivorcehimandtocomehome.Onceagain,Centreprevaricated,whilewelcomingthematerial fromKozo.InNovember1940hehandedoverthelatestJapanesediplomaticcodes–bynow,of course,Purplewasinforce–followedbyothermaterial,climaxinginApril1941withanotherbatch ofciphertelegrams–302pagesinall–whichappearstohaveenabledMoscowthroughthesummer toreadsometrafficbetweenTokyo’sembassies. InMay1941,afterdomesticsceneswhichcanbeimaginedbetweenthelovelornJapaneseandhis bitterlyalienatedRussianwife,ElenawasatlastgrantedherwishtoreturntoMoscowwithherson. AfterherdepartureKozocontinuedtoforwardinformation,butneveragainsoughtcash;heasked thatpaymentsshouldgotoElena,thoughitisunknownwhetherthiswasdone.Hissubsequent offeringsincludeda21MayreportdescribingGerman–JapanesediscussionsinBerlinaboutan attackontheSovietUnionintendedtostartwithintwomonths.On22June,followingtheonsetof ‘Barbarossa’,Tokyochangedallitsdiplomaticcodes,butKozowasquicklyabletoprovidethenew onesforEurope,themoreeasilybecausehehimselfwaspromotedtoactingchargéd’affairesin Sofia.HewentonpassingMoscowimportantcodinginformationuntil1944,whenamidthegeneral turmoilofEuropecontactwithhimwasbroken. AfterthewarheresumedhisworkfortheNKVD,whichcontinueduntil1952.Nothingisknownof thelaterfortunesofElenaorhermother.AslongastheintelligencefilesoftheNKVDandGRU remainclosedtoresearchers,itisimpossibletoknowhowmuchJapanesediplomatictrafficwasread inMoscow.AsBletchley’sexperienceshowed,itwasnotenoughtosecuredetailsoftheenemy’s cipheringtechnologyandcodebooks:immenseintellectualinputandelectro-mechanicalaidswere alsorequiredinordertoreadenemysignalsquicklyenoughtobeofoperationalusetotheRed Army.But,givenKozo’sundoubtedroleasaninformant,itseemsplausiblethathismaterialenabled theRussianstoaccessatleastsomeofthesameinformationasSorgesentfromTokyoaboutJapan’s decisionnottoattackStalinuntiltheSovietUnion’sdoomwasassured.Andunlikethespy,he continuedtopasscodingsecretsuntilthelaststageofthewar. 4 GO UR EV I TC H TA K ES ATR A I N AwirelessmessagefromCentretoMoscow’sforeignstationsconfirmedthenewsof22June1941: ‘Fascistbeastshaveinvadedthemotherlandoftheworkingclasses.Youarecalledupontocarryout yourtasksinGermanytothebestofyourability(signed)Director.’TheagentsofthevastSovietspy networksinEuropewereprofoundlyshaken,aswelltheymightbe,byearlyGermansuccesses,and discussedthemfeverishlywhenevertheymet.InSwitzerland,the‘Lucy’Ringintensifieditsefforts anditsreporting.On2July,AlexanderRadóreportedthatMoscowwasHitler ’smainobjective,and thathisarmies’otherthrustswerediversionary.Germany’sgeneralscertainlywishedthatthiswas true,whichmayhelptoexplaintheinformationpassedtoRadófromBerlin.Inreality,however,to thegeneralstaff’sfuryHitlerhadinsistedonstrikingsouthwithequalvigour,towardstheoilofthe Caucasus.On7AugustRadócitedanassurancebytheJapaneseambassadorinBernthattherewasno questionofhiscountryattackingtheSovietUnionuntilGermanywasvictorious.Before ‘Barbarossa’,AlexanderFootetransmittedtoMoscowonlytwiceaweek,at1a.m.Nowhewas dispatchingmessagesalmostdaily,someofthemcontainingdetailedGermanorder-of-battle material. FundingbecameaproblemforthespiesonceRussiabecameabelligerent,sincecashcouldno longerbechannelledthroughitsdiplomaticmissions.MoneywasthelifebloodoftheRing,notleast because‘Lutzi’–RudolfRössler,themercenary–wouldnotsingwithoutit.Once,absurdly,Centre instructedAlexanderFootetotraveltoVichytoreceiveapayment,asifanEnglishmancouldstrollat willintoalienterritory.EventuallyMoscowdevisedasystemwherebymoneywaspaidintoaUS bank,whichwasthencreditedtoitsGenevabranch.ThissuitedtheAmericans,whomadea100per centprofitoneverytransactionbyemployingtheofficialdollar–francexchangerate,ratherthanthe realblack-marketone.Hundredsofthousandsofdollarswereeventuallytransferredinthisway, thoughCentreneverentrustedanagentwithmorethan$10,000atatime,lestthetemptationto‘go private’becameirresistible. RösslerwasrepeatedlypressedbyMoscow,throughRadó,torevealhissources,andequally insistentlyhedeclinedtodoso.DrChristianSchneider,aGermanémigrécodenamed‘Taylor ’, joinedRössler ’sbusiness.AsatestofhisworthhewasinvitedtoidentifyGermanformations deployedontheSouthernFrontinRussia,togetherwiththenumberofWehrmachtPoWsinSoviet hands.Whenherespondedcorrectlytobothquestions,Moscowwassuitablyimpressed.Wehrmacht chiefofstaffGen.FranzHalderlaterragedabouttheleakinessofOKWandOKH:‘Almostevery offensiveoperationofourswasbetrayedtotheenemyevenbeforeitappearedonmydesk.’ Speculationhaspersistedintothetwenty-firstcenturyaboutthesourceofRössler ’sextraordinary informationstream.HehimselfindicatedthathehadarangeofcontactsintheGermanhigh command.EasternFrontintelligencechiefReinhardGehlenlaterclaimed,absurdly,thatMartin BormannwasinRössler ’spay. RadórevealedafterthewarthatthesourcesheandRösslerhadguardedsozealouslyforsolong were…stripsofpunchedpaper.Eachdayofthewar,morethan3,000teleprintermessageswere dispatchedfromOKW’scommunicationscentretotheFührerquartier,unencryptedsincethelinkwas asecurelandline.OneofRössler ’sagentspersuadedtwofemaleteleprinteroperatorstopasstohim ‘spent’ribbons,intendedfordestruction.Bythismeansthespyreceivedcopiesofsome4,500top secretmessagesandeighthundredspecialreports,whichweresubsequentlycarriedbycourierto Switzerland.Ifthisversionofeventsisaccurate,thenRössler ’snotionalsub-agents–codenamed ‘Olga’,‘Werther ’,‘Teddi’,‘Anna’,‘Ferdinand’–wereinrealitymerepapercreations. Thetruthwillneverbeknown.AllthatiscertainisthatRösslersuppliedtoRadóforonward transmissiontoMoscowanastonishingvolumeofhighlyclassifiedinformation,ofwhichfragments interceptedbytheAbwehrhavebeenpublished.HewarnedinMarch1943oftheGermanintentionto attackatKursk.On15AprilhepassedonHitler ’soperationalorderfortheoffensive,thenon20and 29Aprilflaggedsuccessivedelays,finallyreportingthatOperation‘Citadel’wasscheduledfor12 June.On17Aprilhecataloguednewtankandinfantryformationsbeingcreated,withtheirlocations andidentifications;a28JunesignaldetailedtheLuftwaffe’sorderofbattle,whileanother summarisedPanthertankproduction.On25Septemberheprovidedminutesofaneconomic conferenceheldatHitler ’sheadquarters.IfRadó’sstoryofthestolenteleprintertapesseems implausible,onlythatoranotherequallyastonishingnarrativecanexplainthequalityofhismaterial. ThoughtheSwissring’sintelligencedidnotmatchthevolumeandprecisionofthatwhichtheBritish garneredthroughBletchleyPark,itprovidedtheRussianswithincomparablybettermaterialthanthe GermanssecuredaboutAlliedmilitaryoperations. Theevidencesuggests,however,thatMoscowappreciatedthe‘Lucy’Ring’soutputbelowitstrue worth.Inparticular,insteadofrecognisinginconsistenciesandinaccuraciesasreflectionsofchanges ofplaninBerlin,thefamiliar,corrosiveSovietparanoiapromptedarisingconvictionintheminds oftheNKVD–whichpersistedtothewar ’send–thatRösslerandRadóoftheGRUwereconsciously orunconsciouslyinvolvedinaNazideception.ThemostfantastictwistherewasthatSoviet suspicionssoaredwhentheyfoundthatsomeGermanmaterialbeingpassedtothembyBritish traitorsmatchedthatemergingfromSwitzerland.Could‘Lutzi’andherfriendsbepartofan elaborateBritishplot?NobodyinMoscow,asfarascanbediscovered,hitupontherealandsimple explanation–thattheGRU’sSwissagentswereforwardingsomeofthesameGermansignalsbeing interceptedbyGC&CSatBletchleyPark. CommunicationbetweentheRedOrchestraandMoscowwaslostfromJunetoNovember1941,when theWehrmachtswepteastwardsintoRussia,drivingtheNKVD’swirelessreceiversbeyondrangeof theirBerlinagents’weaktransmitters.ItbecameamatterofurgencyfortheRussianstoregain contactwithHarnack,Schulze-Boysenand‘Breitenbach’,andifpossibletodiscoverthefateoftheir networkinPrague,whichhadalsogonesilent.InconsequenceCentrebrokeeveryruleofespionage byorderingtheGRU’sLeopoldTreppertofindmeanstocontacttheNKVDnetworksinHitler ’s capital.Thoughthespies’wirelesseswereoutofreachofMoscow,ifprovidedwiththenecessary codesandschedulestheycouldtransmitmessagestoBelgium,forforwardingtoCentre.In September,TrepperreturnedtoBrusselsfromParistodiscussthisassignmentwithAnatoli Gourevitch,‘MonsieurKent’. Gourevitch’smostnotableachievementsince1940hadbeentocreateinBelgium,withMoscow’s moneyandloansfromfriends,anentirelynewtradingcompany,christened‘Simexco’andbasedin elegantrentedofficesontheRueRoyale,toprovidecoverforthenetwork–and,eventually, amazinglysubstantialprofits.Heboughtacompanycarandhiredachauffeur.Heworked energeticallyatcreatingrelationshipswiththenewGermanmastersofBrussels,mostofwhom provedeminentlycorruptible,especiallyMajorKranzbühler,aprominentfigureintheNazi administrationwhocheerfullyprovidedpasses,curfewlaissez-passersandlettersofintroductionfor thecompany’sdirector-general,whowassopleasinglyeagertocollaborate.Gourevitchcemented Kranzbühler ’sgoodwillbyprocuringanabortionfortheGerman’slocalmistress.Withhisown loverMargaretBarczaactingashostess,theGRUagentbegantoprovidelavishentertainmentsfor Germansandfellow-collaborators,whobaskedinCentre’slargesse.Heacquiredontheblackmarket petrolcouponswhichenabledhimtodrivewithMargaretintothecountrysidetobuyhams,chickens, butterandsuchlikedelicaciesnowdeniedtoordinaryBelgians. HeforgedbusinessrelationshipswithGermancompanieseagertobreakintotheprofitable marketsofoccupiedEurope,andespeciallywiththeNazis’TodtOrganisation.Fromthelatterhe securedandfulfilledalargeorderforcheapspoonsandforkstobeissuedtoGermany’smultitudeof prisoners,politicalandmilitary.AParisbranchofSimexco,calledSimex,openedanofficeabovethe famousLidorestaurant,fromwhichitservicedmanyofTrepper ’sagents.Whilethisremarkableand expensiveoperationwasusefulforsustainingtheGRUnetworks’cover,thereisnodoubtthat Gourevitch,thepharmacist’ssonfromKharkovandformerstalwartoftheYoungCommunist movement,alsohugelyenjoyedhismasqueradeasarichbusinessman,playboyandpatronofthe blackmarket. Heprovidednotestimonyabouttheattitudeadoptedtowardshimselfandhiscirclebyordinary Belgians,whohatedtheoccupationandlivedinterroroftheNazis,butitiseasytoguess.Thereis littleevidenceaboutwhatintelligence‘Kent’s’informantscollectedforMoscow,thoughheprofessed thathisTodtOrganisationcontactsenabledhimtojointhe‘Lucy’Ringinwarningofthe forthcominginvasionofRussia.WhatiscertainisthatCentre’sfundingofthenetworksstopped abruptlyinJune1941,withtheexpulsionofSovietdiplomatsfromWesternEurope.Thereafter, GourevitchandTrepperweredependentforcashupontheprofitsofSimexcoandSimex.Itwasa drolltwistthatthetwoagentswerethusobligedtobecomeenergeticandnotablysuccessfulcapitalist entrepreneursaswellascommunistintelligence-gatherers. Now,inSeptember1941,herewasTrepperaskingGourevitchifsomebodyfromSimexcocould findacredibleexcusetovisitPragueandBerlin.‘Kent’saidthathehimselfwastheonlypersonwith thecoverandconnectionstosecurethenecessaryauthorisations.Hebeganbythrowingalavishrural picnic,followedbyadinnerathome,forhisforemostGermanfriends,atwhichhetoldKranzbühler ofthebusinesstriphewantedtomake.TheNaziofficerrespondedwithouthesitationthat‘Vincente Sierra’hadalwaysbeenhelpfultoGermaninterests;hewassurethenecessarydocumentscouldbe provided.Andsotheywere.InOctober1941Gourevitchtravelledwithouthindrancethrough GermanytooccupiedPrague,wherehesetaboutreconnoitringtheaddressessuppliedtohimby Moscow.Hedislikedwhathefound.Thepremisesechoedempty.Hefeltaninstinctiveunease–and walkedaway.Hishunchwasright:theGermanshadrolleduptheGRU’sPraguegroupmonths earlier. GourevitchmovedontoBerlin,wherehecheckedintothecity’sgrandExcelsiorhotel.Hethen addressedthecontactsnamedbyCentre:IlseStöbe,HarroSchulze-Boysen,ArvidHarnackand others.Inresponsetoaphonecall,Stöbe’smothertoldhimthatIlsewasinDresden,and uncontactable.NexthetriedKurtSchulze,theformertaxi-driverwhoactedastheStöbenetwork’s wireless-operator–andmetwithmoresuccess.HevisitedSchulze’shouseandspentseveralhours briefinghimonnewradioschedules,alsosupplyingthebookphrasenecessarytoencodemessages. ThenGourevitchsetofftoreconnoitre19AlternburgerAllee,whichhedescribedas‘abig, imposinghouse’–theSchulze-Boysens’home.HereturnedtotheExcelsiorwithoutapproachingit, havingmerelysatisfiedhimselfthathewasnotbeingfollowed,thenfilledthefollowingmorning withbusinessmeetingsonbehalfofSimexco.Thatevening,atlasthetelephonedtheSchulzeBoysens,andgaveanagreedpasswordtoHarro’swifeLibertas.Shecheerfullyurgedhimtocome onover;herhusbandwasatworkintheAirMinistry,butshewouldbehappytoseehim.Gourevitch suggestedthatinsteadtheyshouldmeetatanearbyU-Bahnstationandtakeawalk.Hewouldbe readilyidentifiablebythecigarhewassmokingandthecrocodilebriefcasehecarried.Fifteen minuteslater‘anelegantyoungwoman’,walkingrapidly,approachedhimwithouthesitationand extendedherhand.‘CallmeLibertas,’shesaid.HerfriendlinessdispelledtheRussian’sapprehension. Hewasimpressedbyherprofessionalism:nowatcher,hesaid,wouldguessthattheyweremeeting forthefirsttime.‘IneverforgetthatIamactingapart,’shesaid.Sheaddedthatherhusbandhadlong awaited‘Kent’s’arrival–hewantedtheGRUmantomeetsomeoftheirfriends.Thenetworkwasin fineshape,shesaid–‘weareallsafeandsound’–workinghardandabsolutelycommittedtotheir commonideals.Tobesure,lifewasnoteasy,‘butthefuturelooksbrightertodaythanitdid yesterday’–becauseoftheSovietagent’sarrival. Shewarnedhimnottotelephoneagain,becausetheyassumedthattheirlinewastapped;forallhis fluencyinGerman,Gourevitch’saccentwasobviouslyforeign.Sheaskedhisname,which momentarilyembarrassedhim,becausehewasunabletoreciprocateherfrankness.‘CallmeValdes,’ hesaid.Theybothlaughed.LibertastalkedaboutherworkforthePropagandaMinistry,producing cartoonfilmsfortheregime.Shewarnedhimthathisclothes,inwhichtheGRUmantooksuchpride, markedhimoutasaforeigner.Thentheyparted,andtheRussianreturnedtotheExcelsior. Thefollowingevening,amidaheavysnowfall,heapproachedanagreedrendezvous,atwhichhe almostsufferedheartfailurewhenapproachedbyauniformedofficer.ThenHarroSchulze-Boysen oftheLuftwaffeintroducedhimself,sayingeagerly,‘I’mthrilledtoseeyou.’HeledGourevitchto hishome,wheretheydonnedslippersastheycameinoutofthewhiteness.Thevisitorwasshown intoahandsomelibrary,inwhichhenoticedRussianbooksalongsideGermanones,someofthem Sovietpublications.Schulze-Boysencouldscarcelybedescribedassecurityconscious,thoughhe saidthathecouldexplainawaysuchreadingmattertotheGestapoasnecessaryforhisworkatthe AirMinistry.HetoldGourevitchthatnotonlydidhelovepoetry,healsowroteversehimself,though henowfoundthetimesunsympathetictohismuse.Heprofferedaglassofvodka,observing laconically,‘spoilsofwar ’.Thentheysatdowntodinner. Astheytalked,Gourevitchreflectedlater,‘Icouldnotridmyselfofasenseofunreality.Itseemed completelyincrediblethat,amidareignofterror,wheneverybodywasspyinguponeverybodyelse, agroupofmencouldhavesuccessfullypenetratedtheorgansofstateandthearmedforcesatriskof theirlives,sothatGermanycouldregainitshonourandtheGermanpeopletheirfreedom.’He sufferedadifficultmomentwhenSchulze-BoysenaskedhimdirectlyhowitwaspossiblethatRussia wassurprisedinJune1941,whenhisowngrouphadwarnedrepeatedlyof‘Barbarossa’s’imminence. Neither‘Kent’noranymansaveStalincouldprovideananswer. Gourevitchrecordedthat,inconversationalonewithSchulze-BoysenwhenLibertasleftthemafter dinner,theyagreedthattherewasnopurposeinhismeetingothermembersofthegroup;itsufficed thatthevisitorhadgiventhevitalcommunicationsinstructionstoKurtSchulze.Theypartedafter warmembraces,andtheRussianreturnedtohishotel.Hethenspenthourscomposingadetailed reportforMoscowontheconversation,writteninsecretinkinapocketnotebook.Byyetanotherof theblackcomicchancesinseparablefromespionage,onreachingBrusselsinthefirstdaysof November1941hefoundthathis‘invisible’noteswereperfectlylegible,probablyexposedbythe heatintherailwaycarriagefromBerlin–‘Kent’wouldhavebeenatthemercyofanyinquisitive borderpoliceman.Butnosuchfigureintervened,andhesurvivedhisperilousjourneyunscathed.He dispatchedalongreporttoMoscow,detailingtheGermanarmedforces’predicamentinRussiaas describedbySchulze-Boysen.ThiswassupposedlyshowntoStalin,thoughitincludedonefalseand highlydamagingpieceofinformation:aclaimthatCanarishadsuccessfullyrecruitedtotheAxis causeAndréDewavrin,‘ColonelPassy’,GeneraldeGaulle’schiefofintelligenceinLondon. TheBerlinnetworksnowbegantorelayreportstoMoscowviatheTreppergroup’stransmitters.It wasduringthemonthsthatfollowedthattheGermanspickeduptheirsignals.Whilestillignorantof theidentitiesofHarnack,Schulze-Boysenoranyoftheircontacts,theydeducedthatthesewere communistagents,addressingMoscow,andchristenedthenetworkDieRoteKapelle–theRed Orchestra.Thisnamedistinguisheditfromtheregime’sotherimportantsecretenemy–DieSchwartz Kapelle,theBlackOrchestra,thenamegiventothosestrivingtoencompassHitler ’sdeath. AmongearlyfruitsoftheOrchestra’srenewedlabours,asrelayedtoStalin’sStateDefence Committeeon2December1941,wasareportontheWehrmacht’sfuelstate,showingreserves adequateuntilFebruaryorMarch;thereafter,theGermanswerepinningtheirhopesonexploitingthe SovietoilwellsatMaikop.MoscowwastoldthattheLuftwaffehadsufferedseverelosses,especially inCrete,andwasreducedtoaserviceablestrengthof2,500aircraft.AfurtherDecemberreport warnedofanewMesserschmittvariantarmedwithtwocannonandtwomachine-guns,capableof 600kph;aproximity-fusedanti-aircraftshell;developmentworkonhydrogen-peroxide-fuelled aircraft.ArmyGroupB,saidtheRoteKapelle,wouldattackonanaxisthroughVoronezhinthe spring–asindeeditdid.Berlinintendeditstroopconcentrationstobecompletedby1Mayforthe advanceontheCaucasus.On17JanuarytheStavka–armedforceshighcommand–alsoreceivedan interceptedItalianciphertelegramfromBucharest,reportingablockonRomanianrailtraffic,to allowthroughhundredsofGermantrooptrains,headedforsouthernRussia. TheRussianswerewarnedofaGermandeceptionplancodenamed‘Kremlin’,designedto promoteexpectationsthatHitler ’sforceswouldrenewtheirwinterassaultonMoscow–conspicuous Luftwaffereconnaissanceofthecityapproaches,afakeattackorderdated29May1942,signedby Field-MarshalKlugeofArmyGroupCentre.By23MarchtheGRUwasasserting:‘Thissummerthe GermanswillattemptnotmerelytoreachtheVolgaandCaspian,butalsotocarryoutmajor operationsagainstMoscowandLeningrad.’TheRedOrchestraremainedinsistentthatMoscowwasa secondaryobjective–thatStalingradandtheCaucasuswereHitler ’sprimetargets.TheStavka, however,chosetoignoreitsagents;Stalindeployedhisarmiesforthe1942fightingseasononthe assumptionthatthethreattothecapitalwasthemostserious.TheinformationgarneredbytheRed Orchestraandthe‘Lucy’Ring,atsuchrisktosomanylives,alteredlittleintheKremlin’sdecisionmaking,butwouldsoonsweepawaythespies:Germany’scounter-intelligenceagenciesbeganto fumbletheirwaytowardsexposureofthenetworksledbyHarnackandSchulze-Boysen. 7 Britain’sSecretWarMachine 1 TH E S H A R P END Britain’sintelligencemachineryworkedbetterthanthatofanyothernationatwar,andexercisedan especiallycriticalinfluenceonthewaratsea.Acasehistory:justafterthefallofdarknesson8 November1941,asquadronoftheRoyalNavy,ForceK,ledbythelightcruisersAuroraand Penelope,sailedfromMalta’sGrandHarbour,thensteamednorthathighspeed,thrashingthesea.At 4a.m.,140mileseastofSyracuse,theBritishwarshipsmetanItaliansupplyconvoyboundforNorth Africa.Havingworkedup-moonwithouttheirpresencebeingdetected,thecruiserstrainedtheirsixinchgunsandopenedfire,burstingopenthenightwithstarshellbeforeraininghighexplosiveonthe haplessenemy.Forhalfanhourtheywroughtdevastation:sevenmerchantmentotalling39,000tons wereleftsinkingorsunk,togetherwithoneofthesixdestroyersoftheItaliancloseescort.From Aurora’sbridge,CaptainWilliamAgnew’sonlysignaloftheactionwasawarningtohisships,‘do notwasteammunition’,becausestocksatMaltawerelow.Anenemycoveringforceoftwoheavy cruisersandfourmoredestroyers,lackingradar,failedtointervene.At1p.m.thetriumphantBritish squadronreacheditsMalteseanchorageunscathed,toreceivethecongratulationsofAdmiralSir AndrewCunningham,C-in-CMediterranean,onanactionthathedescribedas‘abrilliantexampleof leadershipandforethought’.Mussolini’sforeignministerCountCianofumedinhisdiaryaboutthe engagement,‘theresultsofwhichareinexplicable.All,Imeanall,ourmerchantshipsweresunk.’ TheRoyalNavyhadfallenonthem‘aswolvesamongthesheep’. On24November,ForceKrepeatedthissuccess.Itscrewswereenjoyingaroisteringshoreleave whennewsreachedVallettaofanotherAxisconvoyintransit.Thesailorswerehastilyherdedbackon board,thenthesleekcruiserssetforthtosea.Afterhoursofmanoeuvringtodeceiveenemy reconnaissanceaircraftabouttheircourse,at3.45p.m.theycaughttwoGermanfreighters,Maritza andProcida,carryingfueltotheLuftwaffeatBenghaziinjerrycansstackedasdeckcargo.Escorting torpedoboatsfled.TheBritishcruiserslaunchedadramaticattackduringwhichtheiranti-aircraft gunsfoughtoffLuftwaffeJu-88bombers,whilethemainarmamentrangedbyradaronthe merchantmen.Thecrewshastilyabandonedshipasthefuelcargoeseruptedinflames.Thedestroyer LivelypickedupGermanandItaliansurvivorsbeforethesquadronretiredtoMaltaattwenty-eight knots. Thesesuccesses,andothersinthesameseason,werenotthefruitsofmere‘forethought’bynaval officers,asCunningham’scongratulatorysignalsuggested–theyrepresentedearlyachievementsof Ultrainthewaratsea.FromJune1941BletchleywasreadingnotmerelytheLuftwaffe’straffic, whichhighlighteditschronicallypoorfuelpositioninNorthAfrica,butalsoanincreasingstreamof signals–sixhundredinJuly1941,risingto4,000ayearlater–reportingenemyMediterranean convoymovements,andRommel’slogisticaldifficultiesashore.ItwastruethattheGermansalsohad significantwirelessintelligencesuccessesintheMediterraneanwar–theB-Dienstwasbreakingand reportingBritishmessageswhichrevealedsomeoftheirownconvoymovements,andtheAfrika KorpsenjoyedthefruitsofexcellentsigintaboutBritain’sEighthArmy.ButUltra’scontributionwas criticalinenablingCunningham’swarshipstointerdictAxissupplytrafficuntilearly1942,when BritishnavallossesandGermandominance,especiallyoftheair,forseveralmonthsmadeit impossibletoexploitdecrypts,intheabsenceofwarshipstomountattacksandfighterstocoverthem. Here,aseverywhere,theunchangingrealitywasthatintelligencealonewasuseless,unless sufficientforcewasavailableatsea,inthesky,oronthegroundtousesecretknowledgeeffectively. UltraneverprovidedforewarningofallGermanmovements.Untiltheveryendofthewar,there wereperiodsinwhichtheenemy’simpositionofwirelesssilence,delaysorinterruptionsinthe deliveryofdecrypts,preventedtheAlliesfromputtingthemtopracticaluse.Churchilldemanded testilyofAuchinleck,thenhisMiddleEastC-in-C:‘Areyougettingthesepricelessmessages(which havenevererred)ingoodtime?’TheresponseacknowledgedthatUltrawas‘ofgreatvalue’,but added,‘somearriveintimetobeoperationallyofuse,othersnotso’.Eventhecombinationofspies, airreconnaissanceandUltrafailedtopreventoneofthenotableBritishhumiliationsof1942,the passageup-ChanneloftheScharnhorst,GneisenauandPrinzEugen,prideofHitler ’sfleet,within twentymilesofthecliffsofDover.ThiswasaneventthatshockedParliamentandChurchill’speople inthatseasonofheavydefeatsinthedesertandtheFarEast. TheshipshadbeendeployedtoBrestinthespringof1941,atahigh-watermarkofNazi expansionism,butithadsincebecomeplaintoBerlinthattheyservednousefulpurposeonthe AtlanticcoastsavetoprovidetargetsfortheRAF’sBomberCommand,whichhaddamagedallthree. ThedestructionoftheBismarckinMayshowedthatHitler ’sbigshipscouldnolongerhopeto ventureintotheAtlanticshippinglanes.HethusdeterminedthattheyshouldreturntoaGermanport– whichbecameknowntotheBritish.FrenchagentsofMI6maintainedaharbourwatchatBrest,while RAFphotographicreconnaissanceaircraftdailymonitoredtheships’condition.On24Decemberthe AdmiraltyinformedRAFCommandsthataGermanbreakouteastwardcouldtakeplaceatanytime. LateinJanuary1942,UltrarevealedScharnhorst’sguncrewsexercisingaboardtheheavycruiser ScheerintheBaltic.MultipleintelligencesourcesreportedallthreebigshipsslippingoutofBrestfor nightsteamingtrials,thenreturningbeforedawn.TheyalsonotedthereinforcementofGermanlight forcesintheChannel,andintensiveminesweepingactivity.TheFirstSeaLord,AdmiralSirDudley Pound,toldthechiefsofstaffon3FebruarythataconcentrationofLuftwaffefightersontheChannel coastsuggestedthatScharnhorstanditsconsortsintendedtobravethepassage,thoughhewas unawarethatHitlerhadgivenordersforthemtotackletheNarrowsindaylight,whenGermanair superioritywouldbemosteffective,andwouldalmostcertainlydetertheRoyalNavyfrom committingitsownheavymetal. HowdidtheBritishproposetodealwiththeGermanrunforhome?Acriticalpointwasthatno capitalshipsoftheHomeFleetweredeployedanywherewithinrange.Itwasindeeddeemed unthinkabletoriskthemwithineasyreachoftheLuftwaffe,especiallyafewweeksafterthe destructionofPrinceofWalesandRepulsebyJapanesetorpedo-bombers.Responsibilityforstopping Vice-AdmiralOttoCiliax’ssquadronwouldrestwithdestroyerandtorpedo-boatflotillasstationed alongtheEnglishsouthcoast,andevenmorewiththeRAFandFleetAirArm,whosesquadronswere broughttoshortnoticeinaccordancewithaplanforthiscontingency,codenamed‘Fuller ’.Justtwo Britishsubmarineswerealsoavailable,topatroloffBrest. On5February,UltrarevealedCiliaxhoistinghisflagaboardScharnhorst.Threedayslater,AOC CoastalCommandwarnedRAFFighterandBomberCommandsthatabreakoutwaslikely‘anytime afterTuesday10thFebruary’.Onthe10th,however,C-in-CBomberCommandstooddownhalfof hismodestFullerforce,withoutinformingtheAdmiralty.Thismaynothavebeeninkeepingwiththe spiritofeffectiveair–seacooperation,butitreflectedtheRAF’scavaliermindset,whichresistedany responsibilitytoassistthenavy,whenitsownoverridingprioritywastobombGermany.Astreamof UltrainterceptsshowedtheKriegsmarineconductingintensiveminesweepingoperationsin HeligolandBight,whichremovedthelastlingeringdoubtsabouttheGermanships’destination. AdmiralCiliax’ssquadronsailedfromBrestat10.45p.m.on11February,andfromthatmoment everythingthatcouldgowrongfortheBritishdidso.BletchleyParkencounteredunusualdifficulties breakingintonavalEnigma:messagesfor10,11and12Februarywerenotdecrypteduntilthe15th. ThesubmarineSealion,havingbravedimmenseriskstopenetrateBrestapproachesontheafternoon ofthe11th,withdrewtorechargeitsbatterieshavingseennothingunusual.HadtheGermanssetforth asplannedat5.30p.m.,Sealionmusthaveseenthem,butCiliax’ssailingtimewasputbacktwohours becauseofanRAFbombingraid.ThreeCoastalCommandnight-reconnaissanceaircraftwerealoft, monitoringthetracktakenbytheGermansquadron,buttheASVradarofthatperiodwasprimitive. Amidthedarkness,onecrewsawnothingonitsscreen;asecondfounditssetunserviceable;athird wasrecalledearlybecauseoffogatbase,beforetheGermanshipsreacheditssearcharea.Evenwhen daylightcameandaphotographicreconnaissanceaircraftoverflewBrest,lowcloudandaGerman smokescreenpreventeditscrewfromseeingthatthebigshipsweregone.Britishcoastalradar stationsfailedtodrawappropriateconclusionsfromconcentrationsofenemyfightersintheairand attemptstojamtheirownwavelengths. TwoSpitfirepilotswerefirsttosighttheGermansquadron,at10.42a.m.,justwestofLeTouquet. Theyobservedstandardoperatingprocedure,however,whichmeantwirelesssilence,andreported thesensationalnewsonlyafterlandingat11.09a.m.Sixteenminuteslatertheirtidingswerebroadcast toallBritishcommands,precipitatingasuccessionoffutileassaults.Lt.CmdrEdwardEsmond receivedaposthumousVCforleadingalow-levelattackbysixpitifullyold,slowSwordfishtorpedo biplanesfromManstoninKent,allofwhichplungedintotheChannelamidahailofanti-aircraftfire. TheGermanswerealreadythroughtheNarrowswhenthe‘Stringbags’madetheirrunsat12.42p.m., andallof825Squadron’storpedoesmissed.FiveMTBsdashedoutfromDoverharbour,ofwhich onequicklybrokedown.Theleaderoftheotherfour,onsightingtheGermanships,decidedthatit wasimpossibleforhisboatstopenetratetheescortingscreen.Theythuslaunchedtheirtorpedoesat extremerange,withouteffect.Anotherthreeboats,boundingforthfromRamsgateinworsening weather,failedtofindtheScharnhorstanditsconsorts. Inthecourseoftheafternoonofthe12th,asuccessionofnavaltwin-enginedBeaufortsand HudsonsstagedpiecemealtorpedoandbombattacksontherecedingGermans,withouteffectand withthelossofseveralaircraft.At3.43p.m.fivedestroyersfromHarwich,underfierceGerman gunfire,launchedatorpedoattackatarangeof3,000yards,againwithouteffect.Meanwhile242 BritishbomberswerelaunchedagainstCiliax’ssquadron,ofwhichjustthirty-ninedroppedtheir loadsinthevicinitywithoutscoringahit,andfifteenwereshotdown.TheRAFalsolostseventeenof 398fighterscommitted. TheGermandashup-ChannelhadprovedatriumphfortheKriegsmarine’splanning,skill,daring andluck.Orhadit?ScharnhorststruckoneBritishair-droppedmineat2.31p.m.,withoutmuch effect,asdidGneisenauat7.55p.m.At9.34p.m.,however,offTerschellingclosetohome, Scharnhorsthitasecondmine,whichinflictedgravedamage.Theshipeventuallycreptinto Wilhelmshavenearlyon13Februarywithitsportenginesunserviceable,itsconsortsfollowingat7 o’clockthesamemorning.TheBritishpeopleknewnothing,however,ofthelatedisasterwhich befelltheGermans,causingHitler ’snavalstafftocharacterisetheepisodeas‘atacticalvictory,buta strategicdefeat’.Churchill’scountrymensawonlythatanenemysquadronhaddefiedthemightofthe RoyalNavyinbroaddaylight,withinsightofthewhitecliffs.TheTimesthunderedthatAdmiral CiliaxhadsucceededwheretheSpanishArmadahadfailed.Ajudicialinquirywasheld,ofwhichthe findingsreflectedpoorlyonalltheBritishforcecommandersinvolved. Intruth,thoughtheChannelDashcausedtheBritishgovernmentdeepembarrassmentatabadtime, itwasunimportant.UltrainformedtheAdmiraltyofthedamagetoScharnhorst,whichwasrestored tooperationalfitnessonlyinJanuary1943,whenitjoinedTirpitzintheNorwegianfjords. Meanwhile,on26February1942,RAFbombershitGneisenauindockatKiel,cripplingthecruiser soseverelythatitneversailedagain.Itwasdeemedimpossible,however,tobroadcastanyofthis goodnewstotheBritishpeoplewithoutcompromisingBletchley’ssecurity.TheGermanshipswere thusgenerallysupposedtohaveescapedscot-free.Publicbitternesslingeredforyearsaboutyet anotherpresumeddefeat. BlameforfailuretodestroytheshipsintheChannelNarrowscertainlydidnotliewith intelligence,whichprovidedcommanderswiththebestinformationtheycouldconceivablyhave expectedabouttheenemy’sintentions,uptothemomentofsailing.Commandersdrewappropriate deductions,andwerealerttoCiliax’slikelycourse,savethattheyexpectedhimtoclosetheEnglish coastbynightratherthanbyday.Theproblem,assooften,laywithlackofappropriateforcesto challengetheGermansquadron.Anti-shippingcapabilitywasachronicweaknessofboththeFleet AirArmandtheRAF.Itisoftensuggestedthat,iftheBritishhadknownearlierthatCiliaxhadputto sea,theoutcomecouldhavebeendifferent.Thisseemsunlikely.Inthecourseoftheconflict,many Britishairattacksagainstenemysurfaceshipsfailed.Asever,knowledgewasnotenough,unless matchedbypower. 2 TH E BR A I N ThewaryieldedplentyoffailuresanddisappointmentstomatchthatofFebruary1942intheChannel Narrows,buttheydonotdiminishtheachievementofBritain’s‘brain’,thecommandstructureand bureaucracywhereinthecollection,analysisanddistributionofintelligencewereintegrated. BletchleyPark’scodebreakerswouldhaveachievedmuchless,butfortheexistenceofathreshing machinefortheirgoldenharvest.Thiscouldhavebeencreatedonlyunderthehandofawiseprime minister,whothoroughlyunderstoodthemakingofwar. Churchilldominatedhisnation’sdecision-makingmuchmorethandidRooseveltthatoftheUnited States.Althoughheoftenbaulkedatassessmentswhichdidnotconformtohisownviews,unlikethe dictatorsheneverquestionedtherightanddutyofthechiefsofstaffandtheirintelligenceofficersto speaktheirminds.HewasacriticalforceinmakingBritain’ssecretservicestheleastineffectivein theworld.Becausehehimselfrespectedintelligence,heensuredthatitsagencies,andespecially BletchleyPark,wereadequatelyresourced. Theprimeministeruseddecryptsasoftenasweaponsinargumentwithhisownchiefsofstaff,as againsttheenemy.‘Churchillhadatendencytocreatehisownintelligence,’saidtheJointIntelligence Committee’schairmanVictor‘Bill’Cavendish-Bentinck,somewhatdelphically.Butthechiefsseldom deviatedfromtheprincipleofattemptingtoanalyseevidenceobjectively.‘Thebestarrangement,’ wrotealaterchairmanoftheJIC,PercyCradock,‘isintelligenceandpolicyinseparatebutadjoining rooms,withcommunicatingdoorsandthinpartitionwalls,asincheaphotels.’Thisiswhathappened inWhitehall.Atleastinthesecondhalfofthestruggle,asBritain’swareffortbecamemorecoherent, animpressivelyrobustyetsensitivesystemcollatedandexaminedinformation,thentransferredit fromthesecretdepartmentstooperationalcommanders. BillBentinckthoughttheRAF’sAirChiefMarshalSirCharlesPortalthecleverestofBritain’s threeservicechiefs,whilebeingirkedbyCIGSGen.SirAlanBrooke’ssurgesofstubbornnessin pursuitofhisownhobby-horses.Inlate1941,forexample,againstthefirmopinionoftheJICandall theevidencefromBletchley,BrookepersuadedhimselfthattheGermansretaineda‘massof manoeuvre’,uncommittedtotheEasternFront,whichmightstillinvadeBritain.Itwaswidelythought thatsuccessiveWarOfficedirectorsofintelligenceweretooeagertotellthehighlyopinionated armychiefwhathewantedtohear.TheJIC,bycontrast,didnothingofthesort:itsreportingwas almostunfailinglyhonest,evenwhenitwaswrong. TheJointIntelligenceSub-Committeeofthechiefsofstaff–togivetheJICitsfulltitle–assumed unprecedentedimportanceafterthe1940ascentofChurchillandthefallofFrance.Itmetinahouse ownedbyBillBentinck’suncleinRichmondTerrace,abriskwalkfromthewarcabinetoffices.The chairmanenjoyedimpeccablyaristocraticorigins,andhimselfendedlifeasthelastDukeofPortland, buthehadanunusualandunenviablepersonalhistory.Bornin1897,hewaseducatedatWellington College,wherehewasunhappy.In1918heservedbrieflyinthearmywithoutreachingthefront,then joinedthediplomaticservice,wheregoodlooks,easymannersandanairofbenignwisdommight havespedhimtothetophadhenotmadeadisastrous1924marriagetoanAmericannamedClothilde Quigley,withwhomhehadtwochildren.AsayoungersonBentinckwasrelativelypoor–moreso, aftersomerashstockexchangespeculations.Hiswifenonethelessspentlavishlyandquarrelled spectacularlywithotherdiplomaticwiveswhereverherhusbandwasposted.Bentinckwastransferred fromtheprestigiousParisembassyfirsttoAthens,thentoSantiago,leavingeverywhereatrailof acrimonylaidbyClothilde.BackinLondonin1939,hewasappointedchairmanoftheJICwhileit wasstillinitsembryophase,becausenobodycouldthinkwhatelsetodowithhim,aslongashe remainedencumberedbyhistermagantofaspouse. Soonafterwarbegan,hereceivedathisofficeanalmostincomprehensibletelephonecallfromthe family’sHungarianmaid,whoeventuallymadehimunderstandthatMrsBentinckhadpackedher bagsanddepartedwiththechildren,apparentlyforGlasgowtocatchaboattoAmerica.‘Itwaslikea Frenchfarce,’saidtheJICchairmandrylylongafterwards.Bentinckadoptedamaskofpatrician stoicismtoconcealthetraumathiseventmusthavecausedhim.Thereafter,thoughhiswifemade troubleuntiltheyweremessilydivorcedin1948,hedevotedhimselfsingle-mindedlytohisjob,and mostobserversthoughthimwellsuitedtoit.NoelAnnanfoundBentinck‘veryimpressive…Hehad atemperamentofextremescepticism,yettotalbeliefthattheAlliesweregoingtowin.’Foratime whenMenzies’thronetottered,BentinckwastoutedashispossiblesuccessoratMI6. Thechairmanwasnobrainbox,buthehadanativeshrewdness,impeccablemannersandarelaxed charmwhichenabledhimforsixyearstomanagethepassionsthatoftenswirledatJICmeetings.The Committee’scleverestandmostassertiveservicerepresentativewasJohnGodfrey,directorofnaval intelligence,buttheadmiral’sarroganceexasperatedthosewhohadtoworkwithhim.Meanwhile Godfrey’sarmyandairforcecounterpartswereunimpressiveofficers,andtheMinistryofEconomic Warfare’srepresentativeonlybegantoexertrealinfluencelaterinthewar,whenSirGeoffrey Vickerswasappointedtotherole.Thoughalawyer,hewasaWorldWarIVCwhohadonce commandedaninfantrybattalion:theservicerepresentativeswouldhavefoundithardtosnub Vickers. TherangeofissuesaddressedbytheJICwasextraordinary.Inadditiontothebigstrategic questions,inJulyandAugust1941itsstaffproducedreportsonsuchmattersas‘Military PreparationsbyVichyFranceagainstChad’,‘RumoursDesignedtoMisleadtheEnemy’–arunning theme,‘Madagascar ’,‘Press,CinemaandBroadcastingCorrespondentsinIceland’,‘Anadvanceby theAxisintoSudanandArabia’.EveryTuesdaymorningat10.30,theCommittee’smembersreported tothechiefsofstaffintheCabinetWarRoomsbeneathGreatGeorgeStreet–whatBentinckreferred towrylyas‘leadingmychoir ’.Theirassessmentsmight,ormightnot,influencethechiefs’ decisions,whichwerepassedtotheJointPlanningStafffortranslationintooperationalproposalsand orders.TheJPS’sofficers,famouslyclever,oftenworkedallnighttoprepareappreciationsforthe chiefs’next8a.m.meeting.ChurchillgrumbledtoAlanBrooke,‘Thesedamnedplannersofyours plannothingbutdifficulties.’UtterlyunlikeHitler,however,theprimeministeracknowledgedthat thiswastheirjob–evenifitafterwardsbecametheirdutytoidentifysolutions. ThemostimportantelementoftheJICwasitssupportingbody,theJointIntelligenceStaff,which wascreatedin1941andthereafterprovidedtheCommitteewithin-houseanalysisofmaterialfrom allsourcesbeforemembersdebatedit.Thenewageoftechnologyprovidedanalmostinfinitelywide fieldforexploration,aswellasmeansofaddressingthis:thetrickwastofocusattentionwhereit mattered.Group-CaptainPeterStewart,whorantheRAF’sphoto-reconnaissanceoperations,was exasperatedbyaseniorofficerwhoaskedfor‘allavailablecover ’ofoneEuropeancountry.Stewart respondedthathecouldonlyprovidehelpfulinformationifheknewroughlywhatintelligencethe suppliantwanted–‘naval,military,airorecclesiastical’.R.V.Jonesmadethepointthat,especially whentechnologywasinvolved,itwasessentialtomakeacleardecisionaboutwhatcommanders neededtoknow,thentoexploitanappropriatemixofaerialreconnaissance,PoWinterrogationand signaldecrypts,‘ratherasanarmycommandermightusehisvariousarmsinabalancedattackwith artillery,tanksandinfantry.Thespecificobjectivetobeattackedmightbesuggestedbywhatweknew wasbeingdevelopedbyourownside,andwhichthereforemightalsobeunderdevelopmentbythe enemy,radarandatomicbombsbeingtwosuchexamples.’ TheJISrecruitedsomeoutstandinglyableciviliansinuniform.OnceaweekBentinckassembled itsthirty-oddofficersfora‘brainstrust’,anopendiscussionabouttheenemy’sdispositionsand activities.Juniormemberswereencouragedtospeaktheirminds–whichtheydid,aboutforinstance theman-for-mansuperiorityoftheWehrmachttotheirowntroops.NoelAnnanputitbluntly:‘The BritisharmiesandthenewAmericanarmieswerenotthematchoftheGermanarmiesin professionalismandperhapsbravery.’TheJIC’sjudgementwasfarfromperfect,butmoreoften rightthanwrong.Itopposedtheill-fatedSeptember1940descentonDakar,arguingthattheFree FrenchwerefartoooptimisticabouttheirlikelyreceptionfromVichyforces.Itdeservescreditfor acknowledginginitsreportsthroughout1940–41thatmuchoftheworldexpectedChurchill’speople tolosethewar,thoughitwassufficientlynationalisticnevertowaverfromtheassumptionthat BritainwasGermany’sprincipalenemy.Thusinmid-June1941theCommitteeviewedthelooming NaziinvasionoftheSovietUnionasameregambitinHitler ’scampaignagainstBritain.TheJIS arguedthatoneofhiskeyobjectiveswouldbe‘tousetheSoviet[front]toembarrassandextendusin everyway,therebyhelpingtoachievehissupremeobjective,thedefeatoftheBritishEmpire’. Throughoutthesummerandwinterof1941,theBritishassumedSovietdefeattobeinevitable.A 28JulyreportbytheJISmitigateditsowngloomonlybyexpressinggratitudeforthebreathing spacegrantedtoBritainby‘Barbarossa’:‘AssumingthatthecampaignagainstRussiaresultsina militarysuccessforGermany,theremustbesomepauseforregroupingandrefittingbeforethe GermanArmycanembarkonmajoroperationselsewhere.’TheJICdisplayedbetterjudgementin monitoringincreasingJapaneseaggressioninAsia.On25June1941itweighedtheprospectsof JapanseizingtheopportunitytostrikeatRussia,thenconcluded:‘Wethinkherinclinationwillbeto abstainfrominterventionagainstSovietUnionatpresentstageandtocontinuepolicyofSouthward expansioninwhichcasenextmovewillprobablybeintensifiedpressureonIndo-Chinaforbasesand facilities…ItisagreedthatGermanattackontheSovietUniondoesnotinanywaylessentheneedto pressonwithourownpreparationsforresistingJapanoraidingChina.’Thereafter,theJICassessed withnotableshrewdnesslikelyJapanesebehaviouruptotheirDecemberattackontheEuropean empires. InJuly1941theJICdiscussedanapproachthrougha‘mostsecretsource’byDrCarlGördeler,exmayorofLeipzig,‘aGermanintouchwitharmyelementsinGermanywhowasinfavourofa compromisewiththiscountrybeforetheoutbreakofwar ’.TheJIScommenteddisdainfully:‘Heis not,however,regardedasreliable,anditmaybethatheisbeingusedconsciouslyorunconsciously bytheGermangovernment.’Gördelerhadtoldhiscontact,accuratelyenough,thatGen.FranzHalder andotherseniormembersofthegeneralstaffhadopposedthelaunchingof‘Barbarossa’.ButtheJIS commentedprimlythatsuchaclaimdidnotaccordwith‘otherreliableinformation’reaching London. Moreover,Gördelerandhisfriendsproposedconditionsfordiscussionswhichwereboundtobe unacceptabletotheBritishgovernment:‘asapreliminary…theyrequiredaguaranteethatGreat Britainwouldagreetoanarmisticeandthatshewould,withtheUnitedStates,forcetheRussiansto cometoreasonabletermswithGermanyoverthedemarcationofthePolishfrontier ’.Thisapproach wasrebuffedascoollyaswereotherslaterinthewarbyprominentmembersoftheanti-Hitler opposition,forinstancethelettersenttoLondonviaStockholminMarch1943byHelmuthvon MoltkeoftheAbwehr.TheconsequenceofthisfastidiouspolicywasthattheRussians,andlaterthe AmericansthroughAllenDullesinBern,enjoyedanear-monopolyofwartime‘humint’frominside Germany,thoughthisdidlittletoinfluencetheirpolicies. Theintelligencemachinesometimesreachedconclusionswhichwerethenrejectedbytheprime ministeroroneofthechiefsofstaff.Inthespringof1942asuccessionofreportshighlightedthe failureofAxisairforces’attemptstodestroytheBritishsubmarineflotillabasedatMalta,and emphasisedthedifficultiesofpenetratingthevastconcreteU-boatpensatBrestandLorient.The RoyalNavynonethelessinsistedthattheRAFshouldpersistwithitscostlyandfutileattacksonthe bases.AsFirstSeaLordinJuly1942,AdmiralSirDudleyPoundoverruledhisownintelligencestaff tomakeadisastrouspersonaljudgementthatArcticconvoyPQ17wasthreatenedbyGermancapital ships,andmustscatter,ablunderwhichprecipitateditspiecemealdestruction,andforwhichhe shouldhavebeensacked.Intelligencecouldachievenothingifitwasthusignored.Yet,whilesuch follieshaveincurredjustcensurefromhistorians,itisimportanttoemphasisethatunliketheirenemy counterparts,Britain’sleadersrelativelyseldomdefiedthecounseloftheirintelligenceand operationalstaffs. Thisdidnotpreventargumentaboutthesignificanceofcontradictoryevidence.In1944,for example,theMinistryofEconomicWarfarearguedthatGermany’smanpowersituationwas deteriorating,whiletheWarOfficesawanalarminggrowthintheWehrmacht’sstrength,asrecorded intheJIC’stwice-yearlyEnemyStrengths&Dispositionsreport.Onlybelatedlywasitdiscoveredthat Hitlerwasmanipulatinghisarmies’divisionalnumberstoinflatetheirapparentmight.Inthesame way,inthesummerof1944theJICalloweditselftobepersuadedbyGeoffreyVickersofMEWthat lackofoilwouldprecipitateanearlyGermancollapse.TheCommitteewascorrectinacknowledging theimportanceofoil,andHitler ’sdireshortageofit,butwasover-optimisticaboutthespeedat whichhisarmies’resistancewouldbecomeunsustainable.TherewasanothernotoriousJIC misjudgementon5September1944,inthewakeoftheliberationofFrance,whentheCommittee alloweditselftosuccumbtoeuphoria:‘WhereastheGermanshaveatthemomentanorganisedfront betweentheRussiansandtheGermanfrontier,intheWesttheyhavenothingbutdisorganised remnantsincapableofholdingtheAlliedadvanceinstrengthintoGermanyitself.’Theprime ministerflatlydisagreedwiththisview,arguingthatHitler ’speoplewerestillfarfrombeaten.His owninstinctprovedsounderthantheJISanalysis. Everyintelligencepractitionerwasawareofthedistinctionbetweensecrets,whichwereknowable, andmysteries,whichwereusuallynot.Onceadatewassetforagivenoperationitbecameasecret, vulnerabletodiscoverybytheotherside.Buthowtheenemywouldbehaveinas-yet-unrealised circumstanceswasoftenamystery,becausehehadnotmadeuphisownmind.TheJISmadesome importantmisjudgementsinpredictingGermanstrategicresponsestoAlliedinitiatives–forinstance, theNovember1942‘Torch’landingsinNorthAfrica,andtheJune1943invasionofSicily.Oneofthe JISstaffwroteafterthewar:‘Ourfailureslayreallyinourinabilitytoappreciatetheextreme obstinacyofHitler.MorethanonceweforecastthathewouldwithdrawtoshorterlineseitherinItaly orRussiaortheBalkansinordertoeconomiseondivisions.’Headdedwryly:‘Istillbelievethathe wouldhavedonebetterifhehadfollowedouradvice.’TheconsequencesoftheJIC’s1941scepticism aboutaGermaninvasionofRussiahavebeendiscussedabove–itmademoreimpactinMoscowthan inLondon,byfeedingStalin’sexpectationofChurchillianconspiraciesagainsthimself.Butifthe difficultiesofintelligenceassessmentinwartimeareaccepted,evenwiththeassistanceofUltra,the JIC’srecordseemsimpressive.ThehistorianG.M.Trevelyanoncewroteofasixteenth-century Englishqueen’srelationshipwithherintelligencechief:‘IfElizabethhadtakenWalsingham’sadvice oneveryoccasionshewouldhavebeenruined.Ifshehadnevertakenitshewouldhavebeenruined noless.’ThesamemightbesaidoftherelationshipbetweenChurchillandtheJIC. TheBritishcommandstructurewasmuchmorecentralisedthanthatoftheUS:whileChurchill’s generalsinthefieldwereinnodoubtthattheytooktheirordersfromLondon,acrosstheAtlanticin Washingtonintelligencestaffsbecamedispiritedbyconsciousnessthatlocaltheatrecommanders,and especiallyGen.DouglasMacArthurintheSouth-WestPacific,madedecisionsalmostheedlessof PentagonorNavyDepartmentopinions.Moreover,althoughamongtheBritishtherewerefrequent inter-servicedisputes,theprincipleof‘jointery’wassincerelyembraced,asitwasnotbetweentheUS ArmyandUSNavy.Meanwhile,PresidentRooseveltrarelybecameengagedinoperationaldebates, andseemsseldomtohavebotheredtoreadmuchoftheUltramaterialdeliveredtohim. Itwasmucheasiertoachieveinter-servicecooperationonBritain’ssideoftheAtlanticbecauseits rulingvillagewassuchasmallplace.TheseniornavalrepresentativeontheJISwasanablesailor namedCharlesDrake.TheprimeministerapproachedhimonedayathisofficeinGreatGeorge Street:‘Ithink,Captain,’saidChurchillinthatfamiliarslow-marchdrawl,‘wemustbekin.’Drake replied,‘Ithinkweare,’whichpromptedChurchilltotesthimbyasking,‘Whydoyousaythat?’The navalofficerachievedatriumphbyrespondingthathehadreadbothvolumesofthestatesman’sLife ofMarlborough,inwhichChurchillrecordedthefirstduke’spedigree,assonoftheseventeenthcenturySirWinstonChurchill–andhiswifeElizabethDrake.Theprimeministerquizzedthenaval officerfurther:‘Andyoubelieveit?’Yes,indeed.‘Good,Captain,thenwe’rekin.’Thisanecdote helpstoexplainwhyBritain’ssupremelywhimsicalprimeministerwassobeloved;andhowits bureaucraticbrainfunctionedamidanintimacyunmatchedbyanyotherwarringpower. Thechiefsofstaffsometimesdeploredtheinfluenceexertedbyloosecannonoutsidetheformal hierarchy,amongthemDesmondMorton,whomChurchillhadfirstmetinFrancein1916.InMay 1940hetookthemajorintoDowningStreettoserveashisliaisonofficerwiththeintelligence services.Mortonwasbrieflyinfluential,buthisauthoritydeclinedashismeagrediplomaticskills becameapparent.HughDalton,ministerresponsibleforSOEuntilFebruary1942,wrotethatthe notoriouslyill-temperedmajor‘spokeillofmanyandwellofno-one’.TheAmericansreferredto himwithoutenthusiasmas‘DesperateDesmond’,whileRobertBruceLockhartdubbedhim‘the P.M.’sKitchenDoor ’.BillBentinckdescribedMortonunenthusiasticallyas‘acuriouscreature.An awfullotoftalk.Hedidn’treallyplayanimportantrole.’ThoughMortonlikedtobrandish Churchill’snameinsupportofhisinterventionsinWhitehall’swars,hefailedinseveralattemptsto makehimselfsupremoofthesecretservices.Farfrombeingtheprimeminister ’séminencegrise,he shrankintoasuperiorclerkandrunneroferrands,mostlywiththeFreeFrench.Althoughheknew whatBletchleydid,hisnamewasconspicuouslyabsentfromthedistributionlistforitsoutput. From1942onwardsUltradominatedtheJIC’sandJIS’sactivities.Althoughthousandsofpagesof paperwerealsogeneratedbyMI6andMI5,few,ifany,couldmatchtheauthorityofdecrypts.Itis remarkablethatthehierarchiesofbothservicessurvivedthewarunreformed.AtMI5,the1940–41 actingdirector-generalwastheincompetentBrigadierOswald‘Jasper ’Harker,replacedbythe slightlymoreeffectiveSirDavidPetrie,formerlyofMI6,whosedeputyhethenbecame.Kathleen Sissman,oneofthesecurityservice’sfewwomenandanintelligenceofficerofthehighestgifts, fiercelydenouncedHarker ’sunfitnessforhisduties,andinconsequencefoundherselfsackedand obligedtotransfertoMI6.FortunatelyforMI5,HarkerandPetriehadseveraloutstanding subordinates,suchasGuyLiddellandLt.Col.TomRobertson,togetherwithsomeofthecivilians whojoinedforwartimeservice.ThesamewastrueatMI6,thoughStewartMenziesandhissenior men–Dansey,Vivian,Cowgill–sustainedanuneasyrelationshipwiththeir‘hostilitiesonly’staff, HughTrevor-Roperprominentamongthem.‘WhenIlookedcoollyattheworldinwhichIfound myself,’thedonwrote,‘Isometimesthoughtthat,ifthiswasourintelligenceservice,wewere doomedtodefeat.’ThehistorianconsideredMenziesanhonestanddecentman,ashismostsenior subordinateswerenot,but‘Idonotthinkheeverunderstoodthewarinwhichhewasengaged.’ Trevor-Roperhadlittletroublecollaboratingwithsuchfellow-amateursasthearmy’sBrian Melland,hisowncousin;theRAF’sJohnPope-Hennessy,anarthistorian;barristerEwenMontaguat theAdmiralty.HehadthehighestrespectfortheBletchleystaff,andforLiddellatMI5.Buthe complainedtoLordSwinton,chairmanofWhitehall’soversightbodytheSecurityExecutive,about thefailingsofMI6,andwroteinequallysavagetermstotheprimeminister ’sintimate,Lord Cherwell,whomheknewwellfromChristChurch,throwinginforgoodmeasureadenunciationof Gambier-Parry,hisownsuperior.TheseinterventionsquicklybecameknowninBroadway,and earnedTrevor-RoperaformalreprimandfromMenziesandVivian. Quiteunperturbed,followingBletchley’sChristmas1941breakingoftheAbwehr ’sprincipal EnigmacipherTrevor-RoperdemandedthatanewMI6sectionshouldbecreatedtostudyCanaris’s organisationbyexploitingtheflowofnewUltra.Findinglittleenthusiasmforthisproposalinside Broadway,hetookitinsteadtoCherwell.Itisscarcelysurprisingthatthissortofhigh-handedness incurredtherageofTrevor-Roper ’sbosses.NigeldeGrey,deputychiefofBletchley,wrotecrossly, ‘Isitnecessarytoarguewithajuniorofficer?…PersonallyifhewereinmyemployIshouldtell himtoshutup–ifhepersistedIshouldsackhim.’ForsometimedeGreydeclinedtoallowTrevorRoperaccesstothePark,assertingthathewas‘notasuitableperson’.Internecinewarfareescalatedin 1942.Trevor-RoperfoundhimselfintroubleafteraholidayinIrelandduringwhichFrankPakenham precipitatedhisarrestbyIrishpoliceasaBritishspy,anepisodewhichdidnotamuseBroadway. ThenTrevor-RoperleakedtoGuyLiddell’sstaffthefactthatMI6waswithholdingfromMI5 interceptsaboutBritishagentsabroadwhomtheGermanshadidentifiedorsuspected.Vivianand Cowgill,learningofTrevor-Roper ’sresponsibilityforthedisclosure,clamouredforhissacking, thoughLiddellwarnedthemthattheywouldbedeprivingBritishintelligenceofahugetalent. Amazingly,andtothecreditofMenzies,Trevor-Ropergothisway,becomingchiefofanewAbwehr section,witheventualpromotiontomajor. ‘C’kepthisownjobpartlybecauseDesmondMortonandotherWhitehallcriticslackedthecloutto unstickhim.Moreimportant,MenziesexploitedhissupervisoryroleoverBletchleyParktodeliver personallytotheprimeministerchoicespecimensofUltraintelligence,codenamed‘Boniface’, whichwentfartoobscurethedeficienciesofMI6’shumintactivities.Insecretservicesmorethan mostinstitutions,inthewordsofR.V.Jones,‘Ifgoodworkresultsinsuccess,thecreditwilltendto fallonthoseofficerswhopresenttheresultstotheforumwheretheyaremadeknowntothe operationalorpoliticalstaffs.’LikewiseBillBentinck:‘OnlyBletchleykept[Menzies]inhisjob.He wasnotaverystrongmanandnotaveryintelligentone.’WhereasmanyBritishinstitutionswere turnedontheirheadsandremadeinthecourseofthewar,BroadwayBuildingsescapedsuchafate. But,giventhatnonationalsecurityapparatusisperfect,whatseemsremarkableisnotthatMenzies andhissubordinatesconstitutedaweaklink,butthatotherpartsofthemachineworkedwell. ArthurSchlesingerofOSSwrote:‘Intelligenceisonlyaseffectiveasitsdissemination…eventhe best-designeddisseminationsystemcannotpersuadebusypeopletoreadpoliticalanalysisunlessit affectsthedecisionstheyareabouttomake.’Theprimeministerandchiefsofstaffwerefarmore likelytotakeheedofUltradecrypts,fillingatmostonesideofaflimsy,thanlongJISanalytical papers,howeverablydrafted.ItwouldbemistakentopretendthatbecauseChurchillcreatedan admirablesystem,thisalwaysworkedsmoothassilk.Howcoulditbeso,whenhehimselfwasa uniquehumanbeing,whoseattitudesanddemandswereneverpredictable?Itbecameafamiliarmoan throughoutWhitehall,thechiefsofstaffs’officesandthesecretwarcommunitythatChurchillabused snippetsofintelligencewhichreachedhim,tomakefoolishorill-informedinterventions.Sir AlexanderCadogancomplainedtohisdiaryonedayin1941:‘It’shopelessconductingbusinesslike this.AnthonyEden[theforeignsecretary]seesnopapers,heisdraggeduptoLondonfor24hours, dineswithP.M.Theybothhappentoseean[Ultra]interceptwhichmakesitlookasifwemightget GermansoutofAfghanistan.Sotheygetonthehop,andIgetmessagestosaythatitmustbedoneat once.Butthereareconsiderationsofwhichtheyareblissfullyunaware,poorchildren.’ Onthecreditsideoftheledger,however,thesystemfordistributingUltradecryptsto commanders-in-chiefinthefieldbecameevermorerefined.On5March1941,BletchleyParksenta momentoussignaltothedirectorofmilitaryintelligenceinCairo,announcingthatthenceforward decryptscontainingoperationaldataaboutGermanforceswouldbesenttohimdirect,sothathours wouldnolongerbewastedintransitviaserviceministriesinLondon.Suchmessageswouldbe prefixed‘OL’:‘Theyaretoberegardedasabsolutelyreliable,butmustreceiveutmostsecurity… Sourceofthisinformationthoughknowntoyouisnevertobementioned.Endeavourtocheckany laxityofsecurityanddrasticallyconfinepersonnelwhoseesignalstoabsoluteminimum.’The systemofSpecialLiaisonUnitswascreated:cellsatmainheadquarters,whosemembers–MI6 personnelinuniform–livedandworkedentirelyseparatelyfromthelocalarmyintelligencestaff, andwerealoneresponsibleforreceivingandprocessingincomingEnigmadecrypts.Thesewerethen passedtoseniorofficerswithappropriatewarningsabouthowbesttodisguisetheircontentsbefore anypartwaspasseddownthecommandchain.Theorganisation,anditssecurityarrangements, workedwell,thoughonlyinthelatterhalfof1942didUltraflowsufficientlyregularlyandspeedily tosecurethefullconfidenceofBritishgeneralsinthedesert.Moreover,itremainedforeveralong marchtotranslateknowledgeoftheenemy’sdeploymentsintovictoryoverhisforcesonthe battlefield. TheBritishservicewhichusedintelligenceleastimaginativelywastheRAF.Foralltheundoubted clevernessofPortal,fromOctober1940chiefoftheairstaff,itsintelligencedepartmentwasweak.It washardertomeasuretheenemy’soperationalairstrengththantocounthisshipsortanks. Throughoutthewar,allairforceswildlyoverstatedtheirpilots’combatsuccesses,andthusthe numberofenemyaircraftdestroyed.PerhapstheworstAlliedintelligencefailureofthewarwas misjudgementoftheGermaneconomy.ThiswaspartlybecauseUltraprovidedfarlessassistancein informingtheAlliesabouttheenemy’sindustries,whichexchangedinformationonpaperorby telephonelandlinemorethanbywireless.Theweaknesswaswellillustratedbythereportofthe LloydCommitteeonGermanoilresources,whichestimatedthatRAFbombinghadbyDecember 1940alreadyachievedacutof15percentinenemyfuelavailability,atamomentwhenBerlinwas unawarethattheBritishwereevenengagedinasystematicairattack. Mattersdidnotmuchimprovelaterinthewar.SirGeoffreyVickerswroteinaretrospective5 February1945reportoneconomicintelligence:‘Thescienceofdestroyingorganisedwarindustry …aninfinitelycomplexsocialandmaterialorganism,wasunbornwhenthiswarbegan…Service commanders,whenattackingindustry,areevenlessprofessionallyqualifiedthantheirservice advisers…Thechoiceofindustrialobjectivesdependsonananalysisoffactorsfarmorecomplex thanthosewhichdeterminethestrategyofacampaignandcanrelylessonscienceoronexperience …Thecorrectionofappreciationsisverifiedbyeventsmuchmorecloselyandmuchlesscertainly thanthosewhichdeterminestrategyinthefield…Economicintelligenceinthiswarhassuffered continuouslyfrominadequatecontactwiththosewhowereplanningandorganisingourownwar economy.’ Acombinationofmeagreevidenceandpooranalysis,basedonmistakenassumptionsaboutthe Naziindustrialmachine,togetherwithobsessivewishfulthinkingbytheRAF’s‘bomberbarons’, causedtheairmenconsistentlytooverstatewhatairbombardmentmightachieve,wasachievingand hadachieved,especiallyagainstGermany.TherewasalsotheproblemthatUltraprovidedmuchless industrialdatathanmilitaryandnavalinformation.Ingeneral,thisbookarguesthatwhat distinguishedtheWesternAllies’wartimeintelligenceprocessesfromthoseoftheAxiswasthatthey stroveforhonestyandobjectivity,eveniftheywerenotalwayssuccessful.Inthecourseoftheair war,however,thisprinciplewasbreached.SofixatedwereseniorRAFandUSAAFofficerswiththeir determinationtodemonstratethatstrategicairbombardmentcouldwinthewar,thatthehistoryofthe bombercommands’intelligencedepartmentsshowsaninstitutionalisedcommitmenttofantasy,ofa kindmoreusualintheGermanandJapanesehighcommands. TheUSAAF,liketheRAF,wasforyearsmoreresistanttointelligenceinputfromoutsideagencies thantheAlliedarmiesornavies,preferringtoemployitsownairmentomaketheirownassessments, especiallyaboutbombingtargets.In1939,Gen.‘Hap’Arnoldconvenedaboardoffourofficersto studybombingtargets.Inthesummerof1941Gen.HeywoodHansellreturnedfromavisittoBritain withatonweightofRAFtargetfolders,andhisownopinionthatAmericansknewmoreabout Germany’soilandpowersystemsthandidtheBritish,thoughtheRAFseemedquitewellinformed aboutenemyaircraftproductionandtransportsystems.ArnoldtoldHanselltosetuphisown organisationtoscourciviliansourcesforintelligenceabouteconomictargets,andanofficewasduly establishedinNewYorkCity.Thisrecruitedabandofcivilianacademics,someofthemveryable: WilmaBrun,whotaughtGermanatColumbia;MarvinDickey,aGermanprofessoratCornell;a businessmannamedMalcolmMoss,whoprovedhighlyeffective–itwashewhosuggestedhiringa friendnamedMcKittrick,whohadstudiedGermanandAustrianpowerstationsforAmericanbanks. McKittrick,accordingtoHansell,proveda‘goldmine’.Byautumn,alongtargetlisthadbeen compiled,dominatedbyeconomicratherthanmilitaryobjectives.Implausibly,somewerelocatedin SouthAmerica,whereWashingtonhadsomefearsofaGermandescent.Yet,until1944,theresultsof allthisenergeticdelvingweremeagre.TheUSAAFjoinedtheRAFinconductingbomberoperations againstGermanythatrepresented,inChurchill’sphrase,‘abludgeonratherthanarapier ’. Scientistsandstatisticianswhosoughttoconductobjectiveanalysisofwhatairattackwas,orwas not,achieving,suchasFreemanDysonofRAFBomberCommand’sOperationalResearch Department–afamousfigureintheUSafterthewar–foundthemselvesmarginalised,theircounsel dismissed.OnlyinthelastfifteenmonthsofthewardidtheAmericanairstaffsdosomewhatbetter, assistedbyanevermoreformidableincreaseinhardpower–bomberandfighternumbers.The USAAFachievedthedestructionoftheLuftwaffeintheair,andcorrectlyidentifiedsyntheticoil plantsastheweakestlinkinHitler ’swareffort.ItisstrikingtonoticethatBletchleyPark’sAir SectionconsideredtheUSAAF,andnotBritain’sownairmen,itsclosestpartnersandmost enthusiasticconsumersofintelligence.TheAirMinistrycouldclaimnomatchingaccessofwisdom. 3 AT S EA TheRoyalNavy’sintelligencedepartment,indeedtheentireAdmiralty,fulfilledaverydifferentrole fromtheWarOfficeandAirMinistry,whichmerelysetpolicyandadministeredtheirrespective services.Theoccupantsofthemagnificenteighteenth-centurybrickcomplexonthenorthsideof HorseGuardsParade–thefirstpurpose-designedofficebuildinginBritain–notmerely administeredBritain’sfleet,butalsoactedasitsoperationalheadquarters,dailydirectingthemotions ofhundredsofshipspatrolling,oiling,convoying,repairing,fighting.Fromthedawnofnaval warfare,theforemostchallengeforcommandershadbeentolocatethevesselsoftheirfoes:Nelson spentyearsofhislifeploughingtheseasattheheadofafleet,merelyseekingtofindtheFrench.In thetwentiethcentury,however,wirelesstransformedthestory:itenabledcommandersashoreata moment’snoticetogiveorderstochangethecourseofwarshipsthousandsofmilesdistant,andalso madepossiblethedetectionandlocationofthoseoftheenemy. TwothousandmenandwomenservedintheNavalIntelligenceDivision,amongwhomAdmiral JohnGodfrey’spersonalstaffoffifteenclusteredintheAdmiralty’sRoom39.Thiswasformally knownas‘NID17’,flagbridgeoftheintelligencewaratsea,withitsbigwesterlywindowslooking downontheDowningStreetgarden,theForeignOffice,thelakeinStJames’sPark,andHorse GuardsParade,thelastdisfiguredbywartimeclutter–barrageballoons,vehicles,temporary hutments.DonaldMcLachlan,oneofGodfrey’swartimestaff,admiredhischief,butunderstoodwhy othersweregalledbyhim:‘Likethedriverofasportscarinatrafficqueue,hesawnodangeror discourtesyinacceleration.’Godfrey’simpatienceandirascibilitypromptedhisreplacementatthe endof1942,thoughthemachinehecreatedremainedalmostunchangeduntiltheendofthewar. Outsidetheadmiral’sgreenbaizedoorsathispersonalassistant,thedashingformerjournalist CommanderIanFleming.McLachlanagain:‘ifnotthewisestofthestaffinRoom39,themostvivid …Hisgiftwasmuchlessfortheanalysisandweighingofintelligencethanforrunningthingsand fordrafting.Hewasaskilledfixerandavigorousshowman…agiantamongname-droppers.’The NIDalsoemployedwritersandhistoriansincludingHilarySaunders,WilliamPlomerandCharles Morgan;anarthistorianwhohandledPoWinterrogationreports,CharlesMitchell;andtheformer headofThomasCook’sWestEndoffice,whorantheScandinaviansection.Room39wasknownto the‘secretladies’andtypistsas‘theZoo’. McLachlanitemisedinorderofimportancethematerialfromseventeensourceswhichwas collatedandreviewedbyGodfrey’sstaff.Unsurprisingly,thelistwasheadedbydecryptedenemy wirelesstraffic:untiltheendof1943AdmiralKarlDönitzandhissubordinatesashoresoughtto micro-manageGermany’sU-boatcampaign,andthusconstantlyexchangedsignalswithcaptainsat sea,muchtotheadvantageoftheBritish.Thereafterintherollcallofintelligencesourcesfollowed captureddocuments;bearingsonenemyshippingsecuredby‘Huff-Duff’;interceptedvoice messages;airphotographs;shipsightingsbyaircraft;informationfromagentsorfriendlysecret services;PoWinterrogations;wirelesstrafficanalysis;enemycommuniqués;hintsfromintercepted civiliancorrespondence;topographicalandtechnicalinformationfromopensources;friendlyand neutralobservers;tacticalinformationgatheredduringoperationsatsea;sightingsbymerchantships andcoast-watchers;intelligenceforwardedfromotherservices;instructionsfromenemyintelligence organisationstodoubleagentsunderBritishcontrol.Allmaterialwasgradedinreliabilityand importance,from‘A1’to‘D5’. Therewasincessant,fractiousandsometimesfierceargumentabouthowfarprotectionofthe Ultrasecretshouldbeallowedtoconstrainoperationsagainsttheenemy.On11March1942C-in-C PlymouthwrotetoGodfrey,asDNI,complainingthatinformationaboutanenemyvesselthatwas beingtowedtoCherbourg,andaboutanescortedGermantankeronpassage,hadbeeninBritish handsintimetoattackthem,butreachedoperationalcommanderstendayslate.AdmiraloftheFleet SirCharlesForbes–knowntohisownserviceas‘WrongWay’ForbessinceheshiftedtheHome FleetbeyondreachofNorwegianwatersjustbeforetheApril1940Germaninvasion–fulminated: ‘Theintensesecrecywhichshroudsallinformationconveyedby“Ultra”messageshasbeenfoundto militateagainsttheusefulemploymentofthisinformationforoperationalpurposes.Thereis,indeed, atendencytoplacetheclaimsofsecuritybeforetheclaimsofoffensiveaction…Idonotthinkitcan betoostronglyemphasisedthathoweversecretmaybethesourcesfromwhichintelligenceis obtained,suchintelligencecanneverbeanendinitself,andifitdoesnotleadtoactionitis valueless.’ Forbes’sletterissignificant,becauseithighlightsthedailydilemmasfacedbytheguardiansof Ultra.Moreover,itillustrateshowwiselyandwellBritishandmost–thoughbynomeansall– AmericanofficersservedtheAlliedwareffort,byresistingmanytemptationstoexploitdecrypts,in orderthattheymightprotecttheAllies’widerinterestsinthesecretwar.Inthelatterhalfof1942, whenairinterdictionofRommel’sMediterraneansupplylinesattaineddevastatingeffectiveness, guidedbyUltra,almosteveryRAFattackwasprecededbyareconnaissanceoverflight,tomaskthe sourceofBritishknowledge. IfBletchley’soutputwasthemostimportantsourceofintelligence,supplementaryaidswere indispensable.Sigintcouldnotbereliedupontoprovide–forinstance–warningofsailingsof Germancapitalships,oftenscreenedbywirelesssilence.Norwegianagentsmonitoringthefjord anchoragesofTirpitzanditskindprovidedvitalalertsaboutwhethertheywerepreparingtoputto seaorhaddoneso.Anavalintelligenceofficerwrote:‘Soreliablewasthisservice…thattheOICin Londonhadcompletefaithin[theagents’]accuracyandregularity.’HerewassomethingMI6did well.Meanwhile,aerialreconnaissancewasinvaluablewhentheweathermadethispracticable, thoughitremainedaninexactscience,especiallyifnavalintelligenceofficerswereobligedtorelyon apilot’srememberedglimpses,ratherthanonphotographswhichcouldbesubjectedtoexpert interpretation.Itwashardforaircrew,thousandsoffeetup,todistinguishbetweenabattleship,a heavycruiserandabigdestroyer.InJuly1942aLuftwaffepilot’ssightingofasingleBritishplanein theskyoffNorwaydeterredtheGermansfromdispatchingTirpitzagainstPQ17.Theairman reportedseeingacarrieraircraft.Inrealitythishadbeenamerefloatplane,buttheKriegsmarine declinedtheriskthataRoyalNavycarriergroupmightbewithinrangeoftheirpreciousmonster. IntheearlywaryearsBritishtechnicalknowledgeaboutU-boatswaspoor,partlybecausetheNID lackedsophisticatedinterrogatorswhoknewwhatquestionstoaskprisoners.By1942,mattershad improved:U-boatcrewmeninBritishcampsrevealedtheexistenceofthePillenwerfer,thebubbleejectiontechniqueforfoxingAsdicdetectors;alsodetailsofGermantorpedoesandsearch-receivers forradartransmissions.Interrogatorslearned–asdidtheirLuftwaffecounterpartsquizzingAllied airmen–toconfoundprisonersbyshowingoffknowledgeoftheirdomesticaffairs,forinstancethe charmsofthered-hairedwaitressatLorient’sCafédeRennes.Aproblempersisted,thattheRoyal Navywasunwillingtobelievethattechnologyitsownshipslackedmightworkfortheenemy– severalU-boatrefinements,andbig5.9-inchgunsmountedondestroyers. Someinterrogatorsfavouredofferingrelativelylavishhospitalitytocelebrityprisonerswhomight provideimportantinformation.InOctober1944thedirectorofintelligencethrewuphishandsin horrorwhenhelearnedthathisofficershadspent£2onwininganddiningaU-boatcaptain.TheDNI issuedaformalwarningagainst‘entertainingattheRitzandthepurchaseofconsiderablequantities ofgin.Ifthesefactsbecameknown,theremightbegoodcauseforscandal.Furthermore,Iandmany othersarequiteunabletoenjoytheseluxuries,anditisoutofallproportionthatourenemiesshould.’ Theinterrogatorrespondedimpenitentlythatitseemedworth£2oftaxpayers’moneytoconvincea scepticalNazithattheRitzwasstillstanding. Perversely,evenasthetideofwarturneddecisivelyagainsttheGermans,someofDönitz’s crewmeninAlliedhandsbecamestubbornlysecurity-conscious.On12March1944theDNIbriefed theFirstSeaLordonrecentPoWinterrogations.Some70percentofU-boatcrewsbythenaccepted thatthewarwaslost,and25percentwouldfranklyavowthistoaBritishofficer.Butcrewswere bettertrainedtoresistinterrogation;evenatthislatehourfortheNaziempire,‘thereisageneral beliefthatthosewhodivulgeinformationwillbepunishedafterthewar ’.Whencensorsdiscovered thatcapturedU-boatcrewmenwereusingasimplecodetoconveysensitivematerialinlettershome toGermany,thetrafficwasallowedtocontinue,inhopesthattheNIDwouldfindusesforsuch disclosures. NextdoortotheAdmiralty,theOperationalIntelligenceCentrewaslocatedinthenewCitadel building,adankconcretemass,muchovercrowded,whoseinmatessufferedfromchroniccoldsand viralinfections.TheOIC’ssurface-shipsection,runbyCommanderNormanDenning,tookcentre stageinBritishnavaloperationsduringsuchcrisesasthepursuitoftheBismarck,the‘ChannelDash’ andtheArcticagonyofConvoyPQ17.Duringhoursanddaysofintensedebateandharshdecisionmaking,theFirstSeaLordandhisacolytesbecamefrequentvisitorstotheOIC.Intheearlywaryears therewerepersistentdelaysinimplementingoperationaldecisionsfollowingthereceiptofdecrypts. TheFarEastCombinedBureau,Bletchley’sSingaporeout-stationthereafterevacuatedtoColombo, brokeJapanesesignalsreportingthesightingofPrinceofWalesandRepulse,aswellastheenemy’s attackorders,fourhoursbeforethefirstbombsandtorpedoesstruckthegreatwarships.ButAdmiral TomPhillips,onPrinceofWales’sflagbridge,learnedofthisonlywhentheJapanesewerealready overheadandhisdoomwassealed.FortunatelyfortheRoyalNavy,thetransmissionofsuchurgent materialwasmuchacceleratedthereafter. Thetacticalwaratseawasmorepowerfullyinfluencedbysigintthanthelandcampaigns,partly becauseconvoysandsubmarinestravelledmoreslowlythantanks.Giventhatdecryptionofenemy signalsrequiredatbesthours,andsometimesdays,itsfruitsweremorelikelytoreachcommanders intimetotriggeranoperationalresponseontheoceanthanwasusuallypossibleonalandbattlefield. Onmanydaysbetween1941and1945,themostimportantplaceinBritishnavalheadquarterswasits SubmarineTrackingRoom.There,CommanderRichardHall–sonof‘Blinker ’–gaveordersto rerouteconvoys,inaccordancewiththelatestappreciationsofU-boatpositionsmadebytheRoom’s overlord,theimmenselyrespectedCommanderRodgerWinn.TheRoom’swrybutdeadlyearnest mottowas‘Neverthetwainshallmeet.’Winnhimself,cursedsincechildhoodpoliobyalimpanda twistedspine,wasaremarkablepersonality,whotreatedseniorofficerswithsuitablerespect,likethe formerbarristerhewas,inthecompanyofajudge,suchashelaterbecame.Yetheneverfailedto asserthisownconvictions.Hismoststrikingcharacteristic,whichdistinguishedhimfrommany peersonbothsidesofthewar,wasmoralcourage.Hedrovehisstaffhard,rebukedmistakeswitha bitingtongue,andinsistedthattheTrackingRoomdeliveredasinglecollectiveviewoneveryissue. Informalitynonethelessprevailed:colleaguesweretreatedasequals,heedlessofrank.Civilian watchkeepersandresearchersmaintainedtheRoom’ssignallogandcompileditsrecordsand statistics.Onthewalls,graphsrecordedpeaksandtroughsofmerchant-shipandU-boatsinkings, togetherwiththeprogressofnewconstruction.TheRoom’shubwasan8ftx8fttable,onwhichwas mountedachartoftheNorthAtlantic.Here,foruptofourteenhoursaday,Winnorhisdeputysat chininhand,plottingdistancesandcalculatingspeedsandangles,withoneeyeontheteleprinterthat spasmodicallyclatteredintolife,disgorgingflashesfromBletchley.Ontheplot,thelimitsofAllied aircoverwereshownbyredarclinespaintedacrosstheocean.U-boatpositionswereindicatedby colouredpins:redforafirmfix,whiteforasighting,blueforaDFbearing. SometimesduringaU-boatwolf-packattack,theRoyalNavy’sescortsmightsecureuptofortyDF ‘fixes’inanhouronDönitz’ssubmarines.Tosecureareasonablyaccuratebearing,ashipneededto bewithinfortyandfiftymilesoftheU-boat’stransmissions;togetapreciseone,tentofifteenmiles. Ingoodweather,aconvoymightaverageaspeedofseventonineknots.ThoughasurfacedU-boat couldmanageelevenknots,itssubmergedspeedslowedtojusttwoorthree.ThusitwasthatAllied aircraftexercisedacriticalinfluenceaslongasconvoyssailedwithintheirsweepradius,byforcing submarinestodiveevenifair-droppeddepth-chargesfailedtosinkthem.Sincethesenavalbattles tookplaceinrelativelyslowmotion,divertingthecourseofaconvoycouldrenderitimpossiblefor Dönitz’shunterstocatchup. EverymorningWinnorhisdeputyheldatelephoneconferencewiththeC-in-CWestern ApproachesinLiverpool,andthechiefofstafftotheC-in-CofRAFCoastalCommand,during whichWinndescribedthemaineventsoftheprecedingnight.AtmiddayHalldispatchedafour-page situationreporttoChurchill’sWarRoom.Onceaweek,theentiretableplotfromtheTrackingRoom wastransferredtonewchartsheets,astheoldonesbecamepepper-pottedwithpinpricks.Acolleague wroteofWinn’s‘uncannyflairforguessingaU-boat’sbehaviour ’.Duringrunningconvoybattles thatpersistedthroughseveraldaysandnights,‘theintenseintellectuallabourthatwentintothisbattle oftacticswastolerabletothehumanbeingsengagedonlyifitbecameforthemvirtuallylikeagame ofchessorbridge…theyhadtokeepincheckanyleapofimaginationwhichwouldhavepicturedin termsofappallinghumansufferingtheirfailuresay,toextricateatankerconvoyfromtheassailing pack.Otherwisethestrainwouldhavebeentoogreat.’Thus,theywereonceobligedtopreservean icycalmwhileoneoftheirownformercolleaguesintheTrackingRoom,acertainCommander Boyle,ledaconvoyfromTrinidadofwhicheleventankersweresunkonebyone,untiljustoneship reachedport. InDecember1942,WinncameunderimmensepressuretodetachfromasouthboundAtlantic convoytheWhiteStarlinerCeramic,carryingairfieldspecialists,becausethesemenwereurgently neededatTakoradiinWestAfrica.Forfourdaysherefused,assertinghisconvictionthatthe Germansweretrackingtheconvoyandwouldsoonattack.Thenheyieldedtotheinsistenceofthe MinistryofShipping.Ceramicracedahead–andwassunkwithonlyasinglesurvivor.By1943,so greatwasrespectforWinn’sjudgementthatanAdmiraltystandingorderwasintroducedthatnoship orconvoyshouldberoutedagainsthisadvice.Yetsogreatwasthestrainimposedbyhis responsibilitiesthatforamonththeCommanderhadtoquithispost,aftersuccumbingtonervous exhaustion. SomuchhasbeenwrittenaboutBletchley’striumphinbreakingtheU-boatcodes–whichwasreal enough–thatthestoryoftheBattleoftheAtlantichasbecomedistorted.Thematchingachievement oftheKriegsmarine’sB-Dienstintelligenceservicedeservesmorenotice.Foraboutayear,fromJuly 1942toJune1943,thoughwithsomeintermissionsanddelays,Dönitz’scodebreakersprovidedthe U-boatcommandwithanextraordinarywealthofinformationaboutconvoymovements,whichmade almostasimportantacontributiontosoaringAlliedshippinglossesasdidthedeadlycoincidenceof BP’sinabilitytobreaktheSharkcipherformuchofthesameperiod. U-boatoperationswerecontrolledbyatightly-knitgroupoffivestaffofficersaroundDönitz,at BdUheadquarterslocatedsuccessivelyinLorient,Paris,and–fromJanuary1943–Berlin.Among themostimportantpersonalitieswasthesignalsspecialistKapitänzurSeeHansMeckel.Thelossof everysubmarinewassubjectedtometiculousinquiry,notleasttoconsiderwhetheranybreachof securitymighthavecontributedtoanAlliedsinking.TheB-Dienst,headedbyKapitänzurSeeHeinz Bonatz,wasbasedinnavalheadquarters,situatedliketheAbwehrinBerlin’sTirpitzüfer,andgrewto astrengthof6,000menandwomen.Teleprintersdisgorgedsignalsfromlisteningstationsallover Europe,ofwhichthelargestwasinHolland.Itscodebreakers,ledbytheveteranformernaval wireless-operatorWilhelmTranow,benefitedfromthefactthatDönitzwasoneofthefewGerman seniorofficersofanyservicetotakeintelligenceseriously.LikehisAlliedcounterparts,he recognisedthatthefirstimperativeofthewaratseawastolocatetheenemy. Duringthespringandsummerof1940,theB-Dienstreckonedtoreadaround2,000British messagesamonth,thoughthisdeclinedsteeplyinAugustaftertheRoyalNavychangeditscodes. From1940until1944,Bonatz’smenachievedreasonablyregularbreaksintotheMerchantNavy code.Aftercapturingitslatestversion,‘MersigsII’,inMarch1942,theyconsistentlypenetrated convoysignals,allottingnamestodifferentvarietiesofBritishtrafficinthesamefashionasdid BletchleytoGermanones:Köln,Frankfurt,MünchenBlau,MünchenRot.Atthistimealsotheybegan tomakeeffectiveuseofIBM-typepunch-cardtechnology. OneofthemostseriouswartimefailuresofBletchleyParkwasthatitssmallciphersecurity sectionfailedformanymonthstorecogniseandalerttheAdmiraltytothevulnerabilityofsomeofits codes,despiteseveralrequestsforadviceandassistancefromthenavalofficerresponsible.The GermansreadthesignalsofNewYork’sharbourcaptain,whogavethecompositionandoftencourse updatesofeastboundconvoys,evenwhenreroutedbyRodgerWinn.TheB-Dienst’sbreakintothe RoyalNavy’sCypherNo.3wasnotcomprehensive:manymessageswerereadonlyafteraninterval ofdays,andonlyaboutoneintenbecameavailablefastenoughtoconcentrateU-boats.Butthanksto sigint,Dönitz’sgeneralviewofAlliedoperationswasstrikinglywell-informed. Thepost-warAmericanstudyofGermannavalcommunicationsintelligence,basedonexhaustive interrogationsofpersonnelandstudyofcaptureddocuments,inthiscasetheB-Dienst’s,concluded: ‘TheenemypossessedatalltimesareasonablyclearpictureofAtlanticconvoyswithvarying degreesofaccuracyastotheroutesandday-by-dayplotting…Convoydiversionsweresometimes learnedfromdecryptionintimetore-arrangeU-boatpatrollinesaccordingly…Themostcomplete singlestatementofGermanconvoyintelligenceeverseenhereinGermannavaltrafficcameina seriesofmessages…inDecember1943andJanuary1944.Thesemessagesapparentlyreproduced the[Allies’]currentconvoychartfortheNorthAtlantic…Theconvoysthenatseawerecorrectly identifiedbothbydesignatorsandnumbers,andaccurateinformationgivenonconvoycycles,speeds andgeneralrouting.’ TheAmericanstudymakesabundantlyclearthatthewirelesswaratseawasbynomeansonesided.BritishsinsofomissionandcommissionbothattheAdmiraltyandBletchleycostshipsand lives.TheB-Diensthadcodebreakersofconsiderableskill,ifnotquiteintheclassofHut8’speople. Inthetendays9–19March1943,duringtheperiodwhentheKriegsmarinewaswinningthesigint waragainsttheRoyalNavy,fourconvoys–SC121,HX228,SC122andHX229–eachlostoneinfive ofitsships,adisastrousattritionrate.Yetactionsorlapsessometimeshadperverseconsequences. ThisveryfailureoftheRoyalNavy’scodesecurityconferredapricelessboonontheAlliedcause, albeitatheavycost.Atintervalsthroughoutthewar,andinitiallyasearlyas1941,Dönitzentertained serioussuspicionsthatEnigmahadbeenpenetrated.On28September,aBritishsubmarineambushed U-67andU-111atarendezvousneartheCapeVerdeislands,offSenegal.Itstorpedoesmissed,andit wasitselframmedbyathirdU-boatonthescene,buttheadmiralsaidwhentoldofthisdramatic incident:‘ABritishsubmarinedoesnotappearbychanceinsucharemoteplace,’andlauncheda majorinquiry.Yetthisconcludedthat‘themoreimportantciphersdonotappeartohavebeen compromised’.AsecondinvestigationinFebruary1943reachedthesameconclusion,onceagain reassuredbythevulnerabilityofBritishcodes,whichpersisteduntilJune.IftheRoyalNavyhadthe powertoreadtheGermanhand,itschiefswouldsurelyhaveclosedthiscostlyhole. MeanwhiletheU-boatcommandignoredtheurgingsofWilhelmTranowtouseacodebookrather thanaciphermachineforitswirelesstraffic,suchasgravelyinconveniencedUScodebreakerswhen theJapanesearmydidso.Later,inAugust1943,aninformantinSwissintelligencetoldanofficerof thelocalAbwehrstationthattheAllieswerebreakingU-boatcodes,awarningpromptlypassedto submarinecommandinBerlin.Dönitzorderedyetanotherinvestigationintociphersecurity.Yetatits conclusion,amazingly,heallowedhimselftobereassured. Theadmiralwroteafterthewar:‘Whetherandtowhatextenttheenemyreactedtoradio transmissionswassomethingwhich,tryaswemight,wewereneverabletoascertainwithany certainty.Inanumberofcasesdrasticalterationsinthecourseoftheconvoyledustoassumethathe did.Ontheotherhand,manycasesoccurredinwhich,inspiteofU-boatradioactivityinthearea, enemyshipssailingindependently,andconvoysaswell,wereallowedtosailstraightonandintothe samearea.’HavingsatisfiedhimselfaboutEnigma’ssecurity,Dönitzchosealsotoignoreawarning ofitsvulnerabilityfromLt.Hans-JoachimFrowein,basedonhisownresearchesusingpunch-card technology.IftheAllies’conductoftheBattleoftheAtlantichadsuggestedomniscienceratherthan fallibility,however,itisoverwhelminglylikelythatDönitzwouldhaveguessedtheUltrasecret. On1June1943theRoyalNavyabandonedNavalCyphersNo.3andNo.4,introducingNaval CypherNo.5,alsoadoptedbytheAmericansandCanadiansforAtlanticoperationson10June, whichtheB-Dienstprovedunabletobreak.Bletchleywasfuriousthattheswitchtooksolong,having warnedeightmonthsearlierofthepreviousciphers’vulnerability,buttheAdmiraltypleadedthehuge administrativechallengeofissuingnewcodestothousandsofships.Moreover,GC&CS’sCipher Securitysectionhadalsobeenblameworthy. Whilethewaratseawasfarmoredecisivelyinfluencedbycodebreakingthanwasanyland campaign,itisquitemistakentoviewtheBattleoftheAtlanticexclusivelyasastrugglebetween BletchleyandtheB-Dienst–here,aseverywhereelse,hardpowerwasvital.In1943,beyond GC&CS’striumphinbreakingtheSharkcipher,theAlliesenjoyedasurgeofnavalandairstrength thatembracednewescortgroups,escortcarriersandVeryLongRangeAircraft,mostlyLiberators, togetherwithimprovedtechnology.Thispromptedapolicyshiftawayfromreroutingconvoysin favourofgoingheadtoheadwithattackingU-boats.Bythewinter,whiletheB-Dienstwasonceagain achievinggoodbreaksintotheBritishMerchantShipcode,Dönitz’sforcelackedthecapability effectivelytoexploitthem.TheGermanslaunchedspasmodicattacksonconvoysuntilthelastdaysof thewar,buttheircampaignwaslonglost.TheprincipalreasonthatDönitzfailedtostranglethe AtlanticsupplyroutewasthathelackedU-boatsinsufficientnumberstoachievesuchafeat.Ultra muchassistedtheAllies’slaughterofenemysubmarinesinthesummerof1943,especiallyin providingtargetsfortheairwingsofUSNavyescortcarriers,buttorevisitChurchill:‘Allthingsare alwaysonthemovesimultaneously.’ AfterthewarDonaldMcLachlancataloguedwhatheandhiscolleaguesconsideredtheRoyal Navy’sIntelligenceDepartment’sprincipalwartimeblundersandlapses.Foremostwasfailureto realisethattheKriegsmarinewasreadingimportantBritishwirelesstraffic.TheScharnhorst’s ChannelDash,andindeedseveralotherforaysbyGermanbigships,remainedlastingsourcesof embarrassment.TheAdmiraltyunderratedthethreatfromItalianfrogmen,whoinflictedsome cripplinglossesin1941,andrespondedtoolittleandtoolatetorevelationsofthechronic vulnerabilityofwarshipstoairattack.ItfailedtoreviveusefullessonsaboutGermanU-boattactics fromWorldWarI,andformanymonthsrefusedtobelievethatDönitz’scraftwereattackingonthe surfaceatnight.Beforethewar,theAdmiralty’sdirectorofsignalsopposedanextensionoftheDF wirelessnetworkforfixingwarshippositionsbydirection-finding:hedeclaredthatsuchequipment wouldbeawasteofresources,becauseinoperationalconditionstheenemywouldmaintainwireless silence.AlltheaboverepresentedcasesinwhichtheBritishacquiredsufficientinformationto counterorforestalltheenemy’smoves,hadtheAdmiraltymadeimaginativeuseofthis.YettheNID wasthebestofthethreeBritishservices’intelligencedepartments,anditswartimerecordwasmore impressivethanthatofitsfoes.Dönitzneveracknowledgedthegapingholeinhismostsensitive communications,whiletheBritishpluggedtheirownintimetosecurevictory. 8 ‘Mars’:TheBloodiestDeception 1 GEH LEN HowcantheincompetenceandmyopiaofGermanintelligencebeexplained?Herewasanationofthe highestcultural,technologicalandscientificachievements.Hitler ’sarmyshoweditselfforatimeto bethefinestfightingforcetheworldhaseverseen,albeitinaghastlycause.Itisnolongersupposed byresponsiblehistoriansthatAdmiralCanarisassistedtheAlliedcause–inotherwords,thathewas explicitlyatraitor.TheAbwehrandGestapowereproficientinsuppressingResistanceactivityand capturingAlliedagentsinoccupiedterritories,eveniftheRedOrchestraescapedtheirattentionfor sevenyears.Canariswasrisiblyunsuccessful,however,inconductingintelligence-gathering activitiesabroad.BeyondlosingeveryspydispatchedtoBritain,hisagentsfarednobetterinthe UnitedStates.Theadmiral’sJune1942Operation‘Pastorius’landedeightwould-besaboteurs,who fellintoFBIhandswithinafortnight.Sixofthemwenttotheelectricchair,andGermanoperations elsewhereweresimilarlybungled.Partoftheexplanationforthisinstitutionalfailure,banalasit seems,isthatmostoftheAbwehr ’sofficersdidnottryveryhard.Alargeproportionofthoseposted abroadwerecontentmerelytoenjoyanexistencemuchmorecomfortablethanwasavailableinthe Reich,tofiddletheirexpensesandtransmittoGermanyanyhotchpotchofinformationfertile imaginationscouldcontrive,assistedbyinputfromdoubleagentscontrolledbyMI5.Nobodyin Berlinsoughttoimposepurposeandrigour. TheGermansinvadedRussiawithsucharecklesslyarrogantmindsetthatforsomeweeksthey madenoseriousattempttobreaktheRedArmy’scodes,becausetheywereconfidentofvictory whatevertheirfoesdid.ThismoodchangeddramaticallyasSovietresistancehardened.Hitler ’s forcesreceivedtheshockoftheirlivesafteroccupyingKiev:aseriesofmassiveSovietdemolitions eruptedaroundthem,triggeredbyradiocontrol.TheWehrmachtbegantoacknowledgethenecessity ofmonitoringtheairwaves.Inthewinterof1941,themostdisturbingintimationofthevastresidual strengthoftheRedArmycamefromGermaninterceptionofmessagesfromdivisionswithnumbers ina‘400’series–this,whenattheoutsetBerlindismissedanynotionthatStalincouldmustersuch vastforces.ThedistancesofRussiacreatedchronicsigintproblems:evenwhenahundred WehrmachtinterceptionstationsweredeployedontheEasternFront,theseneversufficedfor comprehensivemonitoring. TheGermanslearnedmuchaboutSovietwirelessproceduresaftercapturingCol.Kurmin,signals chiefoftheRussianTwelfthArmy.TheBritishwerealarmedwhenBletchleyinterceptedsignals suggestingthatmuchSovietcommunicationstrafficwasvulnerable:‘theGermanscanreadimportant Russiannaval,militaryandairforcecodeswithpromptitude…[Yet]thisgravehandicapisnotinthe leastrealisedbytheRussians.’ThereisnodoubtofthevulnerabilityoflowerRedArmycodesin 1941–42,northatGermanradiointelligencereadatleastsomecommandmessagessentbyoperators whore-usedone-timepads.But,inordertobelievethattheGermansachievedusefulandconsistent penetrationofSoviethigherciphers,evidencewouldbenecessarythatthiswasexploitedbyHitler ’s armycommanders.Instead,thereisonlyathinpatchworkofdecryptedStavkamessages,noneof muchsignificance,togetherwithobvioussignsthatsomeinterceptsderivedfromRussiandeceptions. ThedominantfactsofthefirstyearofthecampaignontheEasternFrontwerethat,withorwithout breaksintoSovietcodes,theGermansfailedtosecureMoscowandLeningrad,theirprincipal strategicobjectives.Theflowofdecryptsslowedgreatlyafter1April1942,whentheRedArmy introducednewcodesandcallsigns. Lt.Col.ReinhardGehlen,seniorintelligenceofficeroftheWehrmachtontheEasternFrontfrom thattimealmostuntiltheend,nonethelessachievedthehighestwartimereputationofanyGermanin hisfield.HewasborninErfurtin1902,sonofabookseller.Hejoinedthearmyin1920,servedinthe artilleryandmarriedadescendantofadistinguishedPrussianmilitaryfamily,HeratvonSeydlitzKurzback.Hegraduatedtothegeneralstaffin1935,andintheearlywaryearswongoldenopinions asanoperationsofficer.InJuly1941hewaspromotedlieutenant-colonelandattachedtotheFremde HeereOst,orFHO,theintelligencesectionofthehighcommand,ofwhichhebecamechiefinApril 1942,afterhispredecessorwassackedforpoorperformanceduringthewinterbattlesaround Moscow,oneamongmanyscapegoatsfortheWehrmacht’sfailure. Gehlenwasanausterefigure,taciturnandphysicallyundistinguished,whoskilfullyingratiated himselfwithhissuperiors,atthesametimemaskingfromhiscomradesruthlessambition.He broughttohisworkanewenergyandimagination:whilemostofhiscounterpartsthroughoutthe armyrecruitedconventionalstaffofficers,Gehleninsteadhiredclevermenheedlessoftheirmilitary accomplishments.HecombedtheWehrmachtforlinguists,geographers,anthropologistsand lawyers,whodramaticallyraisedthequantity,ifnotthequality,ofreportingandanalysis.Hemade gooduseofpatrols,togetherwithinterceptionoflow-gradeRussiansignalsandvoicetraffic.Gehlen alsofocusedenergeticallyonPoWinterrogation,exploitingthemanyseniorRussianofficersin Germanhands.Herana‘celebritycamp’inEastPrussia,knownasFesteBoyen,whichheldan averageofeighty‘guests’,ofwhomthemostimportantwereaccordedsinglerooms.Allprisoners receivedfullWehrmachtrations,andthemostcooperativestayedindefinitely,toprovideinstant responsestoquestionsFHOneededansweringfromdaytodayandweektoweek. SomePoWsstubbornlyrefusedtotalktoGehlen’sofficers,whonotedanoddity:better-educated menoftencollaborated,whilehumbleronesstayedmute.Muchdependedonprevailingbattlefield conditions.WhentheRussiansseemedtobelosingandmoralewaslow,asoneveryfrontprisoners weremorewillingtogiveinformation.Whenthetideofwarturned,cooperationdeclined,because prisonerswhoaidedtheNazisfearedtheirfate–withgoodreason–ifStalinprevailed.Thechief impedimenttogettingintelligenceoutofRussiansoldierswasthattheyservedthemostsecretive societyintheworld:fewevenamongseniorofficersknewmuchaboutanythingbeyondtheirown unit. Gehlenwasnofool,andmoreofarealistthanmanyofhiscolleagues,buthewasalsoaskilled waffler.Consider,forinstance,his29August1942analysisofRussia’scondition,andofMoscow’s optionsintothewinter.Thiswasacriticalmomentofthewar,theeveofStalingrad.FHO’schief offeredtheGermanhighcommandanextensivemenuofalternativescenarios.Thisdeserves attention,becauseitwastypicalofthematerialproducedbytheWehrmacht’smostcelebrated intelligenceofficer.Gehlenassumed,hesaid,thatLeningrad,StalingradandthenorthCaucasus wouldbeoverrunbyGermanforces,andacontinuousfrontestablishedbetweenPersiaandthe Arctic.Russianactionsthereafterwouldbedeterminedby‘theresultsofthesummer–autumn campaign;relativeresourcesavailabletoGermanyandRussia;theevolvingviewsoftheRussian leadership;Russianobjectives’.TheRussianswantedtohusbandresourcesandfightingroomfora wintercampaign,saidGehlen. ‘TheyseemwillingtoacceptthelossofLeningrad,Stalingrad,thenorthandperhapsalsosouthern Caucasus,andevenMoscow.Russianlossesin1942havebeenlowerthanin1941.Theyseemcontent tohaveinflictednotinsignificantGermanlosses,andarethemselvesachievingmanpowergainsby cuttingexemptionsfrommilitaryservice,mobilising1.4millionmenbornin1925,andreducingthe strengthofdivisions.Itmustbeanticipatedthatthiswintertheenemywillagaincommitalarge numberofnewformationstothebattlefield.Onthewhole,thereisnosignthat,intheforeseeable future,theGerman–Russianbalanceofstrengthwillshiftdecisivelytothedisadvantageofthe Russians’–herewasacircumlocutionworthyoftheNKVD. GehlensuggestedthatBritish-suppliedwarmaterialcouldbecomeasignificantfactor,especially intheCaucasus.TheRussians,hesaid,werelearningfast,andhadadoptedmanyGermantactics:air forceclosesupportfortheRedArmy,aggressivepatrolling,deploymentoftanksindefenceonly behindaforwardinfantryscreen.However,Russianmiddleandjuniorleadershiphaddeclined.‘All inall,’wrotetheintelligencechief,‘itmustbeexpectedthattheenemywillkeepmovingonhis autumnandwinteraxes,usingtriedandtestedmethods,especiallywithguerrillasandairborne forces.TheRussianswillseektoachievedisruptionoftheGermanfrontatasmanypointsas possible,shiftingtomajoroffensiveswhereopportunitypermits…Thispossibilityseemstoexist especiallyonArmyGroupB’sfront(Stalingrad)andthatofAGCentreatSmolensk…OnAGA’s front,afterthelossoftheNorthCaucasustheenemyhasconvenientdefensivefacilitiesinthe Caucasusmountainswhereitmustbeanticipatedthathewillprogresstoheavycounter-attackswhere thegroundseemssuitable,aimedespeciallyatdisruptingGermanoilproduction.’ GehlenconcludedthattheSovietarmieswouldapproachwinter‘enfeebledbutnotyetdestroyed, andthuswithanoptiontoinitiatenewoperations…DependingontheforcesavailabletotheRussian leadershipandthefrontpositionsfollowingthesummer–autumncampaign,heavyRussianoffensives willbelikelyata)StalingradandwestofStalingrad.b)WeaksectionsoftheAllied[Axis]front, especiallywheretheRussiansholdbridgeheads.c)Voronezh.d)Mtsensk–Orel.e)Sukhinichi.f) Rzhev.g)InthegapbetweenArmyGroupsCentreandNorth.h)Leningrad…OnlyiftheRussians failtoachievesubstantialsuccessesinthewinterof1942/43;ifasecondfrontin[Western]Europe becomeslesslikely;andiftheeconomicconsequencesofthisyear ’slossesofterritory(including Baku)makearealimpact,canwereckononfinallybreakingRussianresistance.Thiswill presumablynottakeplacebeforethesummerof1943.’ Thiswasnotastupiddocument:itreviewedperfectlyrationallytheoptionsopentotheRussians.It mentionedStalingrad,thoughonlyinthecontextofsixotherpossibleobjectivesforSoviet offensives.Ascepticalreadermightbetemptedtocompareitsequivocationstoapredictionthat,ifa manturnsoverthefifty-twocardsinadeck,hewillfindfouraces.Butduringthemonthsandyears thatfollowed,GehlengravelymisjudgedmostofthebigmomentsontheEasternFront.Hefirst insistedthattheRussians’Operation‘Mars’,theirnorthernoffensiveagainstArmyGroupCentre, wasStalin’sbigpush,towhich‘Uranus’–theStalingradpincermovement,turningpointofthewar– wasmerelyopportunisticandsubsidiary. On25July1943,afortnightaftertheacknowledgedfailureofGermany’sgreatoffensiveatKursk, GehlenassuredthehighcommandthattheRussianshadnoplansforabigassaultoftheirown–only localattacks;ninedayslater,theRedArmydrovewestahundredmiles.On30March1944,Gehlen’s assessmentofthefrontshowedhimobliviousoftheloomingSovietoffensiveagainstCrimea,which broughtnewdisasterupontheWehrmacht.BeforetheRussians’summerOperation‘Bagration’, greatestAlliedoffensiveofthewar,hedismissedSovietpreparationsonArmyGroupCentre’sfront as‘apparentlyadeception’,andpredictedthatStalinwouldinsteadstrikesouth,intotheBalkans. YetCol.Gehlenretainedhisjob,andtherespectofGermany’sgenerals,almosttotheendofthe war.Thiswaspartlybecauseofhisunflaggingplausibilityandpalacepoliticalskills,butchiefly becauseofhissuccessinrunningagentsbehindtheSovietfrontwhoprovidedinformationof extraordinaryquality,reportsthatmadearealimpactonGermandeployments,andthusonthefateof theEasternFront.Gehlenmaythusbeconsideredoneofthemostinfluentialintelligenceofficersto serveoneithersideintheSecondWorldWar.Butwhoseinterestsdidheserve?Thelatestevidence suggeststhathewasthevictimofSovietmanipulation–maskirovka–onanastoundingscale;thatfar frombeingthewizardofhisself-createdlegend,Gehlenwasasupremelygullibledupe. 2 A GENT ‘ M A X ’ Earlyin1942,duringthedisastrousphasewhenStalinstillinsisteduponexercisingpersonalcontrol ofRussia’smilitaryoperations,hedecreedawholesalereorganisationofmilitaryintelligence, dissolvingitsmachineryforhandlingbattlefieldinformation,whichpromptedchaosinitsactivities throughthefirsthalfofthatyear.IgorDamaskin,oneofthemorecrediblemodernRussianhistorians oftheperiod,haswritten:‘ThechaosintheGRUduringthisperiodblightedoperationsandwas responsibleforheavylosses,asfieldheadquartersweredesperatelyshortofinformationaboutthe enemy.’Stalinrejectedallreportsthatflewinthefaceofhisowninstincts:inMarch1942,for instance,theGRUcorrectlypredictedHitler ’sOperation‘Blue’:‘Preparationsforaspringoffensive areconfirmedbythemovementofGermantroopsandmaterials…Thecentralaxisof[theenemy’s] springadvancewillshifttothesouthernsectorofthefrontwithanadditionalthrustinthenorthanda simultaneousdemonstrationattheCentralfrontagainstMoscow…Themostlikelydateofthe offensiveismid-ApriltoearlyMay1942.’Stalincastigatedmilitaryintelligenceforsuccumbingto whathedescribedasobviousGermandeceptions.HeinsistedonlaunchingtheMayoffensiveat Kharkov,whichprecipitatedanewdisasterforSovietarms.Evenaslateas19June,whendocuments foundinashot-downGermanaircraftconfirmedHitler ’semphasisonthesouthernthrustsagainst StalingradandtheCaucasus,HozyaindismissedthemasanobviousGermanplant. Withinweeks,however,hewasforcedtoacknowledgetheterrificstrengthofPaulus’sSixthArmy, drivingeastforStalingrad.Atlast,themasteroftheKremlinbowedtoreality:thesummerof1942 witnessedaseismicshiftinthemannerinwhichtheSovietUnionmadewar.Stalinimplicitly acknowledgedhisownfailureasastrategistanddirectorofRussia’shosts.Hedelegatedauthorityto hisgenerals,atleastuptoarmygrouplevel,andallowedintelligencedepartmentsonceagainto functioninacoherentandprofessionalmanner.Fromtheautumn,whenthebattleforStalingrad began,theRussiansbegantodoremarkablethingsinthefieldofstrategicdeception.TheirOperation ‘Monastery’becameoneofthegreatestsuchschemesofthewar,atleastasimportantastheAngloAmerican‘Fortitude’,whichbroadcastconfusionaboutD-Day. ‘Monastery’wasoriginallyconceivedinJuly1941,withthelimitedobjectiveofpenetratingthe enemy’sintelligenceapparatusandidentifyingtraitorscollaboratingwiththeNazis.Itseems remarkablethatsuchaplancouldhavebeeninitiatedinthosedarkdays,whentheRedArmywas fallingbackeastwardsinheadlongretreat,butsoitwas.TheNKVDandGRUworkedtogetherto createamythicalanti-Soviet,pro-GermanResistancemovementoperatingattheheartoftheRussian highcommand,codenamed‘Throne’.Itwasfoundeduponanetworkofdoubleagentsamongtheold Russiannobleclass–thoseleftaliveafterdecadesofpersecution.‘Monastery’mobilisedhistoric Russianconspiratorialskills.AnoldmannamedGlebov,whosewifehadservedatthecourtof Alexandra,thelasttsarina,wasdesignatedasthe‘Resistancemovement’s’figurehead.Helived almostasabeggarinNovovevichymonastery,butwaswellknowninWhiteRussianémigrécircles. However,theprincipalactiveNKVDparticipant,oratleastglovepuppet,wasanagentnamed AlexanderDemyanov,whowasassignedthemostperilousrole.Bornin1911,hisbackgroundwas impeccablyaristocratic.HisgrandfatherfoundedtheKubanCossacks;hisfatherwaskilledfighting forthetsarin1915;hismotherwasafamousMoscowbeauty.Thefamilylivedinpovertyafterthe Revolution,andAlexander ’soriginsdebarredhimfromhighereducation.Hewasobligedtoscratch alivingasanelectrician,andin1929wasarrestedonachargeofspreadinganti-Sovietpropaganda. Heescapedexileorexecutionbytheusualmeans–agreeingtoserveasaninformer,forwhich purposehewasgivenajobintheelectricalbranchoftheCentralCinemaStudio,Moscow’s Hollywood.Acheerfulextrovert,Demyanovbecameapopularfigureamongthestarsandliterati. TheNKVDpaidforhimtoacquireahorse,torideoutnotonlywiththefilm-makersbutalsowith foreigndiplomatsandbusinessmen,includingagoodmanyGermans.Hemarriedagirlnamed TatianaBeresantsov,arespectedtechnicianatMosfilms,whosefatherwasaphysicianpermittedthe extraordinaryprivilegeofmaintainingaprivatepractice. CentredecidedthatDemyanovwassopromisingadeep-penetrationagentthatheshouldnotbe thrownawayonmereinformanttasks.Hebecamewell-knownandtrustedinanti-Sovietand nationalistcircles.TheNKVD’sgleeknewnoboundswhen,shortlybefore‘Barbarossa’,theyoung manreportedanapproachfromamemberofaGermantrademission,whowasobviouslyworking fortheAbwehr.Demyanov’shandlerinstructedhimtoshownointerest,lestover-eagernessfrighten offtherecruiter.BerlinanywayopenedafileonDemyanov,whowasgiventhecodename‘Max’. WhenwarbrokeoutheenlistedinaRedArmycavalryregiment,butwasquicklyretrievedbyPavel Sudoplatov,whoregardedhimasanidealSpecialTasksagent,withadecade’sexperienceofroleplaying.Inthelatesummerof1941SudoplatovtoldBeriathiswasjustthemantotakealeadin Operation‘Monastery’. ThusitwasthatonedayinDecemberthatyear,duringthedarkestdaysofthestruggleforMoscow, AlexanderDemyanov–codenamed‘Heine’byCentre–setoffonskisfromtheRedArmy’slines nearGzhatsk,120milessouth-westofthecapital,todefecttotheGermans.Hisextraordinarily perilousmissionalmostcollapsedattheoutset:whenhereachedtheWehrmachtpositionsand announcedhimselfasaNazisympathiser,nobodybelievedhim,partlybecauseheclaimedtohave crossedthelinesbyaroutethattraversedaGermanminefield.DemyanovlatertoldtheNKVDhehad beensubjectedtoamockexecutiontoinducehimtotalk.Whetherornotthiswastrue,heobviously cameclosetobeingshotoutofhand.Instead,however,hewashandedovertotheAbwehr.Itsofficers proveduninterestedinhistaleaboutthe‘Throne’Resistancegroup,butimmediatelyenlistedhimas anagent–oneamongthousandsofsuchpeoplewhowereperfunctorilytrained,deployedand expended. TheGermansbecamemoreexcited,however,whenacheckwiththeirfilesshowedthatDemyanov hadbeenearmarkedasaprospectiveagentbefore‘Barbarossa’.Hisbackgroundamong‘former people’–aristocrats–wassuchthathecouldpassmusterinémigrécirclesasananti-Sovietzealot. ThoughtheAbwehrstillshowednoenthusiasmforfollowingtheoriginalNKVDscript–supporting aphoneycounter-revolutioninsideRussia–itshandlersthoughtDemyanovsufficientlysmartand wellconnectedtobecomeanimportantspy.Hismainproblem,duringthetrainingthatfollowed,was tohidethefactthathewasalready–forinstance–anaccomplishedwireless-operator.Onenightin February1942,aLuftwaffeaircraftcrossedthelinestoagridreferencewestofMoscow,where DemyanovandtwootheragentstaskedtoassisthimhurledthemselvesintodarknessoverSoviet territory. Theymadetheirparachutedescentsinterribleweather,andlostcontactwitheachotherasthey stumbledthroughasnowstormnearYaroslavl.AlexanderpromptlyreportedtothenearestNKVD headquarters,andadayortwolaterhisassistantswerepickedup.Duringtheweeksandmonthsthat followedCentre’soperation,overseenbySudoplatov,becameevermorebyzantine.Demyanov’s Moscowflat,wherehelivedwithhiswifeandfather-in-law,becamethefocusofthesupposed Resistancegroup–thewholefamilywasmadeprivytothescheme.AsuccessionofAbwehrcouriers reportedthere,someofwhomwereforatimeleftatliberty,toseewhomtheymet.Otherswere ‘turned’,othersagainwerejailedandpresumablyshot.AfewwerepermittedtoreturntotheGerman linestoreport. ForDemyanovhimself,thesupremelyperilouspartoftheoperationwasover:hewasbackwith hisownside.Italmostdefiesbeliefthatanyman,howeverhighlydevelopedhissenseofadventure andtasteforthesecretlife,couldhavedoneashedid,exposinghimselftothepowerandwrathof NaziGermanyinagameofsuchsubtletyanddeadliness,butMI5deployedtheBritishEddie Chapmaninthesamefashion,thoughtomuchlessadvantage.Demyanovwasthereafterrequiredonly toplayoutapartundertheeyesofhisownspymasters.TheGermanshadequippedhimwitha wirelessset.Centre’s‘WilliamFisher ’wasdeputedtomanagethesubsequentradiooperation–this wasnoneotherthanRudolfAbel,borntoRussianparentsinNewcastleuponTyne,whoafterthewar becameaSovietagentintheUS. ThechallengewasforSudoplatovandhiscolleaguestoplayoutthehandagainsttheAbwehr. BeriawarnedtheSpecialTaskschiefthathewouldbeheldpersonallyresponsibleifanyactof sabotagewascommittedonSovietterritoryinthecourseofthe‘Max’operation.Attheoutset,the Russianshadnoconceptionthattheyhadstartedsomethingthatwouldcontinueforyears–most radiogamesweredetectedbytheenemywithinweeks.TheNKVD’sfirstobjectivewastobuildup ‘Max’s’credibilitywiththeGermans.Hereportedtothemthatthe‘Throne’groupwasconducting railwaysabotagenearGorky,andSovietnewspapersdutifullycarriedreportsoftrainaccidentsto supportthestory;theBritishoccasionallyusedthesameruse,usingdoubleagentstocarryout allegeddemolitionsinBritain. Inthelatterpartof1942,DemyanovreportedtotheAbwehr,andthencetoReinhardGehlenand FHO,thathehadbeenassignedasajuniorcommunicationsofficerattheSoviethighcommand headquartersinMoscow,apostingwhichexplainedhow,thereafter,heappearedtoenjoy extraordinaryaccesstoRussiansecrets.Throughthemonthsandyearsthatfollowed,hesignalledto Gehlen’sstaffamassofmaterialabouttheRedArmy’sorderofbattleandstrategicintentions,which reachedBerlinandFHOviaSofia.TheGermanarmyintheEast–inthepersonofGehlen–became convincedthatitwasreceivingintelligenceofthehighestquality,andincreasinglyeagerto acknowledgeitsauthenticity.AstreamofFHOsignalswaxedeuphoricaboutitsman’sproduct. Moscownowsawopportunitiestoexploit‘Max’s’reportsinsupportofamajordeception operation,forwhichtheNKVDandGRUcollaborated.Thelatter ’schief,Col.Gen.FedorKuznetsov, fulfilledtheroleoccupiedbyCol.JohnnyBevanasheadoftheLondonControllingSectionandBill BentinckoftheJIC–overseeingtheschemeandsupplyingmenusofmingledinformationand disinformationforpresentationtotheGermans.Byfarthemostimportantandhistorically controversialdevelopmentof‘Monastery’cameinNovember1942,apivotalmomentoftheSecond WorldWar.Onthe19th,theRedArmylaunchedOperation‘Uranus’,itshistoricdoubleenvelopment behindtheGermanSixthArmyatStalingrad.Fourdayslater,however,asecondthrustbysixarmies wasunleashedontheKallininfrontatRzhevahundredmilesnorth-westofMoscow–Operation ‘Mars’.ThisengagedlargeGermanforces,butendedinacostlyrepulse,withallfourthrustsbeing smashedbytheWehrmachtatacostof70,000Russiandead.MarshalGeorgiZhukovlater acknowledged‘Mars’asoneofhisownfailures. Morethanhalfacenturylater,however,PavelSudoplatovassertedinhismemoirsthat‘Mars’was betrayedinadvancetotheGermans,withoutZhukov’sknowledgeandontheexplicitordersofStalin, aspartofthedeceptionoperationtodivertGermanforcesfromthecritical‘Uranus’atStalingrad. AlexanderDemyanovwastheinstrumentbywhichtheinformationwasconveyedtotheenemy’shigh command.Thisversionofeventsremainsdisputedamonghistorians,butislargelyacceptedby Russianones.SomeWesternersfinditinconceivablethatevenStalincouldhaveknowingly consignedhundredsofthousandsofhisownpeopletodeathordisablementmerelytosupportaruse deguerre,albeitforhugestakes.Buttheevidenceseemsstrong,indeedalmostconclusive,that Sudoplatovtoldthetruth.ThereisnodoubtthatDemyanovwasanNKVDoperative,workingunder Moscow’scontrol.ItisalsocertainthattheGermansregardedhimastheiroutstandingSovietsource: ReinhardGehlenwenttohisgravein1979stillproudlyassertingthebrillianceofhisownhandling of‘Max’s’material.Mostsignificant,‘Max’s’voluminousreportsarereadilyaccessibleinthe GermanmilitaryarchiveinFreiburg. Amongthemoststrikingmessagesisonedated6November1942andheaded‘ForeignArmies East–ImportantIntelligenceReports’.Thisreads: Agent(Max):On4November,councilofwarinMoscow,chairedbyStalin.Present12marshalsandgenerals.Atthismeeting,the followingprincipleswerelaiddown:a)Carefulapproachtoalloperations,avoidingmajorlosses.b)Lossesofterritoryare unimportant.c)Preservationofindustrialandsupplysitesbyearlyremoval[ofplant]fromendangeredareasisvital,onthisaccount: directivetoremoverefineriesandmachinefactoriesfromGroznyandMakhachkalatoNew-Baku,Orsk,andTashkent.d)Relyon ownforces,notonassistancefromallies.e)Severemeasuresagainstdesertion,thatisontheonehandbyexecutionandintensified controlbytheStatePoliticalDirectorate,ontheotherbystrongerpropagandaandimprovedrations.f)Executionofallplanned offensiveoperations,ifpossiblebefore15November,asfarasweatherconditionspermit[‘Mars’waseventuallydelayedbypoor weather]. Chiefly: –fromGroznytowardsMozdok –closetoNizhnyandWerchny-MamonintheDonarea –closetoVoronezh –closetoRzhev –southofLakeIlmenandLeningrad. Necessaryforcesshouldbebroughtforwardfromthereservetothefront. Thissignal,whilesomeofitscontentisgeneralandvagueratherthanexplicitabout‘Mars’,seemsto provideconclusiveevidencethatunderordersfromMoscowCentreDemyanovgavetheGermans goodwarning,ornamentedwithcircumstantialdetail,aboutaloomingSovietthrustagainstArmy GroupCentre,contemporaneouswiththeRussianencirclementofHitler ’sSixthArmyatStalingrad. The6Novemberreportshouldbereadinthecontextoffrequentorder-of-battledispatchesfrom ‘Max’duringtherun-upto‘Mars’,suchasthesamplesbelow,whichdeservequotationbecausethey illustratethecreativeeffortinMoscowthatwasexpendedoncompilingthem: ImportantIntelligenceReports:1.)8October,agent(Max):1cavalrybrigade,1horsedartilleryregiment,and1pioneerbattalion, allfromthefront,arrivedinTuapse.Theywillremainthereinreserve.2.)8October,agent(Max):1rifledivision,3tankbattalions, andartilleryaswellasseveralspecialdivisionsconductingdemolitionsinthecourseofretreats,allfromMakhachkala,arrivedin Grozny.3.)8October,agent(Max):120Englishand70Americantankswith60EnglishandAmericaninstructorsarrivedinZarev, assignedtotheStalingradfront.4.)8October,agent(Max):1cavalrydivision,4mixedtankbattalions,2artilleryregiments,and 40anti-tankgunsarrivedinKaluga.TheyareassignedtothewesternsectionoftheKalugafront.5.)9October,agent(Max):In Mischina(45OWRzhev),combatgroupsarebeingassembledfromtankbattalions.Manyanti-tankgunsandafueldepot[are located]inMischina.6.)8October,agent(Max):Amilitarydelegationconsistingof2infantrygenerals,1tankgroupgeneral,1air forcegeneral,2admiralsand2militaryengineers,leftMoscowforLondonbyair. TheGermansloveditall.Itwaspricelesstotheself-esteemoftheAbwehrandFHOtobelievethat theirchiefsweresuccessfullyrunningagentsinsidetheSovietcorridorsofpower.Asfarasis known,onlyoneseniorAbwehrofficer,DrWagnerDelius,headoftheAbwehrstationinSofia, questionedtheauthenticityofthe‘Max’material.ButaninquiryhadscarcelybegunbeforeFHO–a furiousReinhardGehlen–intervened.The‘Max’reportswere‘indispensable’,hesaid,‘andmuston noaccountbejeopardised’.Theinvestigationstopped.TheNKVD,knowingthatDemyanov’s standingstoodsky-highafterthefailureof‘Mars’,continuedtofeedasteadystreamofintelligence totheenemy,suchasthis3Decemberreport: Fromagent(Max):ConferenceinMoscow,chairedbyStalinwithZhukov,Timoshenko,andKosslow:Inthenorthernsectionofthe Rzhevfront[where‘Mars’hadtakenplace][sacking]of5divisioncommanders.Theywerereplacedby5majors,whowere appointedcolonels.StalinisdissatisfiedwiththecourseoftheoperationsbetweenRzhevandVelikiyeLuki.Zhukovasksfor armouredandinfantryreinforcements.Stalin[saysthathe]issurethattherehavetobetreacherousinformantsatthetop,sincethe Germansaresowell-informedaboutSovietmovements,plans,andtroopstrengths.HeordersaStatePoliticalDirectorate committeetobecreated,forstrictcontrolandinvestigation[ofpossibletraitors]. Thereisafascinatingcross-bearingonthisstory:intheautumnof1942theBritish,inthepersonof HughTrevor-Roper,begantoponderdecryptsofthistrafficwhichwascausingsomuchexcitement intheenemycamp.Trevor-Roperrecognisedthatthematerial,classifiedbyFHOandtheAbwehr underthegeneralcodenameof‘Klatt’,was‘veryhighlyvaluedbytheGermans’.Heandhissection puzzledendlesslyoverwhether‘Max’andhisallegedsub-agentsinsidetheSovietUnionwere doublescontrolledbyMoscow.Atfirstthisseemedhighlylikely–especiallysowhenLondon warnedtheRussiansabouttheleaks,andtheyshowednointerestinstoppingthem.On31July1943, however,theRadioSecurityServicesaiditsformerview–thatthe‘Max’reportswereRussianplants –mustbereviewedinthelightofthefactthatrecentdispatches‘appearedtocontainaccurate predictionsofRussiantacticalmoves’. ‘Max’hadforecastimpendingSovietinitiativesinthecriticalKursk–Orelsector.TheWarOffice MI14’sMajorBrianMellandcommented:‘Thepossibilityof“MAX”reportsbeing,perhapsinpart, plantedmaterialmust,wefeel,bediscarded…ThereisampleevidencethatGermanintelligenceand Operationsconsider“MAX”reportstobeofgreatvalue;anditisquitepossible,infact,thatthese reportsformthebestfieldintelligenceobtainedbytheenemy.’ByAugusttheBritishwereconvinced –temporarilyatleast–that‘Max’andhisfriendsweregenuinearticles–orrather,authentictraitors intheSovietcamp:‘Arecentexaminationhasshownthemtohavebeensingularlyaccuratein forecastingRussianoperations.’GuyLiddellofMI5wroteon12August:‘MAXmustberegardedas asuccess[fortheAbwehr]…reportshavebeensingularlyaccurateinforecastingRussianoperations andthetheorythatitisaRussiandouble-crossrathergoesbytheboard.’ Trevor-Roperwasstilluncertainabout‘Max’whenhewrotehisApril1945valedictoryreporton theAbwehr.Hesaidthatthematerialseemedtohisteam‘suspiciouslyfreefromtheadministrative hitchestowhichmostspy-systemsareliable’.InformationwastransmittedtotheGermanspunctually andinbulknotonlyfrom‘Max’himselfinMoscow,butalsofromallegedsub-agentsinLeningrad, Kuibishev,Novorossiysk.‘AlthoughweinformedtheRussiansofthefacts,andthenamesofthe personsinvolved,noactionwastakenbythemtosuppressthisapparentdangerousleakage.Aftera varietyofotherhypotheseshadbeenfounduntenable,itwasconsideredinthisoffice(althoughit couldneverbeconclusivelyproved)thattheevidenceshouldonlybesatisfactorilyexplainedbythe assumptionthat“Klatt”,atleastinrespectofthe“Max”Reports,wasaRussian-controlleddeception agent(althoughitispossiblethathehimselfmayhavebeenunconsciousofthefact).’TheBritish,in short,neverentirelyfathomed‘Monastery’,partlybecauseitwasbeyondtheimaginationoftheir intelligenceofficers,eventhesupremelycynicalTrevor-Roper,thattheRussiansshouldsurrenderso muchauthenticinformation,atapricepaidintorrentsofblood,topromotestrategicdeceptions. TheSovietintelligenceserviceswereastrangecombinationofbrutishincompetence,exemplified bytheir1939–42mismanagementoftheRedOrchestrainBerlin,contrastedwithsuperb sophistication,ofwhichOperation‘Monastery’wasperhapsthemasterstroke.OnlyinStalin’s dreadfulworldcould70,000liveshavebeensacrificed,withoutsentimentorscruple,toservethe higherpurposesofthestate.Thebetrayalof‘Mars’totheGermansmayhelptoexplainwhy,untilthe lastyearsofthetwentiethcentury,theRzhevbattlereceivedsolittleattentioninSoviethistories. AlexanderDemyanov’sdoublecareercontinueduntiltheendofthewar–laterSovietdeception operationsthroughAgent‘Max’willbedescribedbelow.HereceivedtheOrderoftheRedBanner fromtheNKVDforhisservices–andtheIronCrossfromReinhardGehlen.Hiswifeandfather-inlawalsoreceivedmedals,inappreciationoftheirsupportingrolesinthewebofdeceitwovenaround thefamily. Itshouldnotbesupposed,however,thatthetriumphantmanagementofDemyanovsufficedtowin bouquetsallroundinMoscow.ViktorIlyin,hispersonalhandlerintheLubyanka,sufferedadreadful fateinoneoftheendemicpowerstruggleswithinSovietintelligence.ItsuitedStalintosustainViktor AbakumovasacounterweightandrivaltoBeria.In1943,hemadeAbakumovheadofSMERSh, chargedwiththedetectionandliquidationoftraitors,anddeputytohimselfasministerofdefence.In anearlyexerciseofpowerinthisrole,AbakumovtrumpedupchargesagainstIlyin,directorofthe NKVD’sSecretPoliticalDepartment.Ilyinhadrun‘Heine’forfiveyears,andwasregardedbythe likesofPavelSudoplatovasoneofthefewhonestmenintheupperreachesofSovietintelligence.He wasafriendofMaj.Gen.BorisTeplinsky,designatedtobecomechiefoftheheadquartersdepartment oftheRedAirForce.AbakumovdenouncedTeplinskyasanenemyofthepeople,andassertedthat Ilyinhadconspiredtopreventhisexposure.Stalinauthorisedthearrestofbothmen.Abakumov personallyconductedTeplinsky’sinterrogation,breakingtwoofhisfrontteethonthefirstnight. Batteredintoawreck,thewretchedmanconfessedthathehadtoldIlyinyearsbeforeofhissympathy formenexecutedinthePurges,andthatIlyinhadcoachedhimabouthowtoescapeexposure. WhenthegeneralwasconfrontedwithIlyininthebasementoftheLubyankaandrepeatedhis farragoofnonsense,theNKVDmanslappedhimandtoldhimtobehavelikeaman.Ilyinresolutely refusedtoconfesstoanything.Defiancedidnotsavehim,however.Hewasheldinsolitary confinement,repeatedlyinterrogatedandbeatenforfouryears,between1943and1947.Throughit allheretainedagallowshumour,oncedemandingofoneofhistorturersthenatureoftheribbonon hischest.Whenthemananswered‘theOrderofLenin’,Ilyinsaidthathewasgladhisowncasewas deemedsoimportant.Evenwhentheinterrogationswereabandonedin1947hewasheldinjailfora furtherfiveyears,until–inthedementedfashionofhigherSovietaffairs–hewassuddenlybrought forthtotestifyagainstAbakumov,nowhimselfdisgracedandimprisoned.Teplinskyremaineda prisoneruntil1955. PavelSudoplatovistoomodesttomentionseveralSovietdeceptionoperationsthatfailedtofoolthe Germans–forinstance,whentheRedArmylaunchedattacksintheDonbasinJuly1943,andinthe Chernyov–PripyatregionduringAugustandSeptember.PoorRussianradiosecurityenabledGerman eavesdropperscorrectlytopredicttheSovietaxisofattack.Ingeneral,however,theStavka’sstrategic deceptionsinthesecondhalfofthewarwerenotablysuccessful.Asecondmajoroperation, ‘Couriers’,alsorequiredStalin’sendorsement,toprotectitsparticipantsfromfiringsquads:noman daredcreateevenafictionalanti-Sovietmovementwithouthispersonalauthority. Fifty-four-year-oldBishopVasilyRatmirovoftheRussianOrthodoxChurchworkedinKalinin underthecontroloftheNKVD’sZoyaRybkinawhenitwasoccupiedbytheGermans.Havingthus establishedhispatrioticSovietcredentials,MoscowCentreturnedtohimtoprovidecoverfor ‘Couriers’.AstheGermanswerepushedwestwardsin1943,thebishopwasinstalledinSamara,in theVolgaregion.HedispatchedtwoclericalnovicestoPskovmonastery,south-westofLeningrad,in German-controlledterritory,supposedlybearinginformationforitschief,whowascollaborating withtheenemy.ThesemenwereinrealityNKVDagents,oneofthem,VasilyIvanov,trainedby EmmaSudoplatov.Themission’splanningwasnotwithoutdifficulties.Thebishopaskedforan assurancethatthemenwouldnot‘committhesacrilegeofbloodshedinGod’ssanctuary’.Inthe courseoftrainingtheagentstopassaspriests,helostpatiencewithacoarse,brashex-Komsomol wireless-operatorwhomockedthesacrament,saying,‘OhFather,butterthepancakesinheaven. Bringthepancakestothetable!’Thismanwasreplacedbytwenty-two-year-oldSergeantIvan Kulikov,whowasbaffledtobequizzedinadvancebyanNKVDofficerabouthisownhistoryof churchattendance,andonlyacceptedwhenhedisplayedanappropriaterespectforthevestmentshe wasrequiredtowear. TheysetforthinAugust,firstforKalininandthereafterforPskov,appropriatelyheavilybearded, supposedlyasrepresentativesofaChurch-basedanti-SovietResistancegroup,andpresented themselvestotheGermansinthisrole.TheAbwehrprovidedthemwithwireless-operators,Soviet PoWs,whoprovedreadilyconvincedinprivateconversationwiththetwo‘novices’thatitwasin theirbestintereststofollowCentre’sorders,ratherthanCanaris’s.Thereafter,theGermans complacentlysupposedthattheywereinregularcommunicationwithaclericalnetworkfarbehind theRedArmy’slines,whichwasinrealitycontrolledbytheNKVD.WhentheRussiansatlastoverran theirlocation,BishopRatmirovandhistwonovicesweredenouncedbylocalpeopleasGerman collaborators;theywerethreatenedwithexecutionbySMERShuntiltheNKVDintervened,togarland themasheroes. Oneconsequenceofthemission’ssuccesswastopersuadeStalinthattheOrthodoxChurchwas loyal;heamazedhissubordinateswhenherewardedthepriesthoodbyallowingitsmembersonce moretoelectapatriarchin1943,aceremonyattendedbyPavelandEmmaSudoplatov.Afterthewar, Ratmirovbecameanarchbishopandwasawardedagoldwatchandamedalinrecognitionofhis contribution.IvanKulikov,promotedtocaptain,marriedagirlhehadmetinhiscongregationin Kalinin. Beyond‘Monastery’and‘Couriers’,SudoplatovtestifiesthattheRussiansranafurtherforty wartimeradiodeceptionoperations,whichwerecontrolledbySMERShratherthantheNKVD. Russianwirelesssecurity,andtacticalpenetrationofGermancommunications,wereimproved dramaticallyfollowingthecaptureofPaulus’sSixthArmyheadquartersatStalingradon2February 1943,despiteitsstaff’sattemptstodestroysecretdocumentsandciphermaterial.Maskirovka achieveditsgreatesttriumphinthesummerof1944,whentheRussianssuccessfullypersuadedthe Wehrmachttoexpecttheirmainassaultinsouth-eastPolandratherthanBelorussia,thenhaving smashedthreeGermanarmiesswitchedaxistoPolandintheautumn.ThoughReinhardGehlenkept hisjobasGermany’sEasternchiefofintelligenceuntilthelastdaysofthewar,themodernevidence suggeststhathewasbear-ledbytheStavkainMoscowevenmoreeffectivelythanwereOKW’s WesternintelligenceofficersbytheBritishandAmericansin1944.WhateverthelimitationsofSoviet wartimeintelligence,itsdeceptionoperationsweremasterpiecesofconspiracy. 9 TheOrchestra’sLastConcert Fromtheautumnof1941,alltheRussians’Europeanspynetworksoperatedonthebrinkofa precipice,renderedmortallyvulnerablebytheexposureoftheidentitiesofthemainplayersinboth theNKVD’s‘Lucy’RingandtheRedOrchestratoLeopoldTrepperandAnatoliGourevitch,together withtherecklessconductofMoscowCentreandoftheGermandissidentsthemselves.Toomany peoplealloverEuropenowknewtoomanynames,sothatasingleinitialarrestprecipitatedavast andterribleunravelling.TheOrchestra’sdoomwassealedbytheGermans’capturethrough direction-findingofthewireless-operatorMikhailMakarov–‘CarlosAlamo’or‘Chemnitz’–inthe RuedesAtrebates,Brussels,intheearlyhoursof13December1941. OnthepreviousdayTreppermadeasudden,unheraldedreappearanceinBrussels.Relations betweenhimselfandGourevitch,alreadyshadowedbymutualsuspicionandjealousy,thereafter deterioratedrapidly.Twodaysafter‘Otto’s’arrival,GourevitchwasatSimexco’soffices,dealing withtheastonishinglyprofitablebusinessissuesentwinedwithitschiefs’espionageactivities,when hewassummonedbyphonetoanurgentmeetingwithTrepperathisapartment.Whenhearrived there,hefoundhisvisitorinastateofalarm.Treppersaidthathehadjustbeenquestionedbythe Germans,andproposedtoreturntoFrancebythefirsttrain.Gourevitchwasappalledthatthechief shouldhavecalledathishomewhenalreadyundersuspicion.Heranamentaleyeovertheentire networkforweaklinksandfixedhisattentionon‘Chemnitz’,whoembracedlouchetastesandan extravagantlifestyle,thoughGourevitchhimselfscarcelypractisedausterity.Thewireless-operator knewMargaretBarcza,Gourevitch’slover,andmanyofthegroup’sothercontacts.Suddenlythe doorbellrang,andtheRussianwasdisconcertedtoopenittoaBelgianacquaintancewhoworkedfor theGermanKommandatur.Thismaninvitedhimselfin,andaskedforaloan.Gourevitchhanded oversomecashtogetridofhim,thenaccompaniedTreppertothestationtocatchaParistrain. GourevitchnowtoldBarczathatBrusselswasbecomingtoowarmforcomfort.Hehimselfproposed todecamptoFrance,andheurgedhertotrytoreachherparents,refugeesintheUnitedStates.She promptlyburstintotearsandinsistedonaccompanyinghimwhereverhewent,withheryoungson René.Gourevitchacceded,thoughheknewthatCentrewasboundtobeenragedbytheirrelationship, whichwasnolessdangeroustohisdutiesthanTrepper ’sliaisonwithGeorgiedeWinter. Theyquittheirflatimmediately,andtooktemporaryshelterinabighouseoccupiedbythe‘front’ directorofSimexco,whichherentedfromthenephewofBelgium’sforeignminister.Gourevitch gavehisservantsseveralmonths’wages–theyoungGRUagenthadcertainlyrisenintheworld–to supportthepretencethathewouldbecomingback.Heoccupiedthenextfewdays‘puttingtosleep’ theagentsofhisnetwork.ThenheboardedatraintoParis,followedtwodayslaterbyMargaretand René.TheytookupquartersinahouseneartheBoisdeBoulognewhichGourevitchhadusedon previousvisitstotheFrenchcapital.AssoonashemetTrepper,itwas‘leGrandChef’s’turntovent violentdismay.Gourevitch’sarrival,hesaid,couldcompromisehisFrenchcovercompany,aswell astheintelligencenetwork.Heinsistedthathisdeputyshouldleave,fast.Theydecidedheshouldhead forMarseillesinunoccupiedVichyFrance,whereSimexhadabranchoffice.MargaretandRené Barczaleftfirst,travellingsouthwithoutdifficulty,usingtheTreppergroup’scontactsandtakingup lodgingsinMarseilleswithaCzechfamily. Meanwhile,GourevitchmetHerschandMyraSokol,twoyoungPolishcommunistswhoactedas Trepper ’sPariswireless-operators.ThefugitiveafterwardsclaimedthatheusedtheSokolstosenda messagetoCentretoreportthethreatenedcollapseofhisnetwork,andhisownflightfromBrussels. Buthiswarnings,hesaid,weretransmittedatamomentinDecemberwhentheGRUhadevacuatedits headquartersinthefaceoftheGermanassaultonMoscow,andlackedhiscode.Thushisemployers learnedoftheBrusselscrisisonlymuchlater,inFebruary1942,adelaywhich,hebelieved, contributedtohis1945indictmentfortreason.GourevitchreachedMarseillesinJanuary1942,aftera journeywithoutincident.Heremainedthereinnotuncomfortablehidingfortheensuingtenmonths, makingnopretenceofconductinganyespionage,andchieflyamusinghimselfwithMargaret.Thanks toCentre’sremittancesandSimexco’shandsomeprofits,theyhadamplemoney.Thisidyll–as Margaretafterwardsrecalledit–continueduntil9November;onthatday,Gourevitch,hisloverand animpressivecacheofcigarsandsilkstockingswereabruptlyseizedintheirflatbyFrenchpolice. ThetwoprisonerswerehandedovertotheGermans,thensweepingacrosstheVichyzoneto completetheiroccupationofFrance.TheGermanshadatlastbrokenintotheRedOrchestra,and eachsuccessiverevelationfromacapturedagentproducedreverberationsthroughoutEurope. Moscow’scontributiontowhatbecameadreadfuldébâcledatedbacktothespringof1942,when thefortunesoftheNKVD’sAlexanderKorotkovwereoncemoreascendantwithintheLubyanka.He tookagamble.GiventhedifficultiesandupsetsinBelgiumandFrance,hesoughttore-establish directcontactbetweenBerlinandCentre,byprovidingtheOrchestrawithnewcodesandcrystals,and thereafterwithmorepowerfultransmitters.ZoyaRybkinadescribesinhermemoirshowsheandher husband‘Kin’,whonowrantheNKVDstationinStockholm,wereinstructedtoidentifyacourier whocouldmakeadeliverytoSchulze-BoyseninBerlin.Afterconsiderabledifficulties,theyfounda Swedishbusinessmanwhowaspersuadedtodothejob.Shesewedthecodesandinstructionsintoa tie,andputthecrystalsintoacufflinkbox,tobeleftinacemeteryfortheLuftwaffeofficer.The SwedereturnedfromhisnextvisittoGermanytoconfessfailure:hehadbeentooterrifiedtofulfil themission,hesaid–everyoneontheBerlinplaneseemedtobestaringathistie.Afterasecondtrip thefollowingweek,however,hereportedsuccess;heclaimed–truthfullyorotherwise–thathehad leftthecodesandcrystalsatthedesignated‘deaddrop’. MeanwhileKorotkovinMoscowselectedtwoagentstotraveltoGermany,carryingnewwireless setstotheRoteKapelle,andwithfurtherorderstocontact‘Breitenbach’,theGestapoofficerwhose existencewasunknowntotheOrchestra.ThemessengerswereveteranGermancommunists,Albert HesslerandRobertBart,bothintheirearlythirties.Hesslerhadcommandedacompanyofthe InternationalBrigadeinSpain,wherehewasbadlywounded.HehadsincemarriedaRussiangirl, andaftervolunteeringfortheRedArmywastrainedasawireless-operator.Bartwasaprinterby trade,whoservedaspellinPlötzenseejailduringtheearlyNaziyearsbeforebeingconscriptedinto theWehrmacht,withwhichheearnedanIronCrossduringthe1940Frenchcampaign.Soonafter beingpostedtotheEasternFront,hedefectedtotheRussians. BothmentookafantasticriskbyagreeingnowtotraveltoBerlin,allegedlywillingly,thoughthis deservestobedoubted.Theywereprovidedwithfalseidentities,respectivelyasalieutenantand sergeant-majoronleave,thendispatchedaboardaC-47ofNo.1Long-RangeAviationDivisionfrom PodlipkinearMoscow,andparachutedtoapartisanreceptioncommitteebetweenBryanskandGomel inoccupiedBelorussiaduringthenightof5August1942.Guidesledthemtoarailstationfrom which,afteraweek-longjourneyviaBialystok,WarsawandPoznan,theyreachedBerlinwiththeir tworadiosets,initselfaconsiderableachievement. TheywentinitiallytotheapartmentofaRoteKapellecontact,KurtSchumacher,whoreceived them,thenseparatedthevisitorstotakerefugeinthehomesofsympathisers.Hesslerinitially transmittedfromthestudioofanexoticdancernamedOdaSchotmüller,afterwardsfromthe apartmentofCountessErikavonBrokdorf.Inmid-AugusthetoldMoscow:‘everythingisgoing well.Thegrouphasexpandedconsiderablythankstothestrengthoftheanti-fascistmovement,andis workingactively.IwillsendadditionalinformationfromHarnackandSchulze-BoysenwhenI receiveanacknowledgementofthismessage.Ampresentlybusyfindinglodgings.’Fromanearly stage,bothNKVDmenappeartohavebeenunderGestaposurveillance.LeopoldTrepper ’sBrussels wireless-operator,aGermannamedJohannWenzel,hadbeenseizedon30June1942,againafterhis transmissionsweretrackedbydirection-finders.Thoughthetruthwillneverbeconclusively establishedaboutwhogaveawaywhomandwhen,underinterrogationbothMakarovandWenzel seemtohavetoldalltheyknew,whichwasagreatdeal.Ripplingwavesofarrestsfollowedacross Europe.TheGestapoformedaspecialSonderkommando,headedbyHaupsturmführerHorstKopkow, toinvestigatetheSovietring.Itsofficerswereappalledbywhattheydiscovered:penetrationofsome ofthehighestheadquartersoftheThirdReich;systematicbetrayalofGermanybyhundredsof Germans.InAugust,theGestaponetbegantocloseonHarnackandSchulze-Boysenandtheirgroups. TheNKVD’sAlbertHesslerwasarrestedinmid-September,alongwiththosewhohadshelteredhim. Hemadehislastapparentlygenuinetransmissionon3September;althoughhemessagedagainonthe 21st,bythenhewasalmostcertainlyactingunderGestapocontrol. Moscowwasslowtorealisewhathadhappened.Centre’sfirstdetailedaccountofthedisasterwas delayeduntilApril1943,andthenarrivedbyatortuousroute:WolfgangHavemann,anephewof Harnack,wasinterrogatedbytheGestapo,thenreleasedforlackofevidence.Hewassenttothe EasternFront,whereatthefirstopportunityhegavehimselfuptotheRedArmy.Heconfirmedtothe NKVDthetotaldestructionoftheBerlinring,accompaniedbyforty-eightexecutions.Amongthose seizedwereamarriedcouple,HansandHildaCoppi.He,aradio-operator,waskilledalmost immediately.She,however,heavilypregnant,waskeptaliveuntilhersonhadbeenbornandattained theageofeightmonths.ShewasthendecapitatedinAugust1943,andherchildhandedovertohis grandparents,withwhomhesurvivedtopursueacareerasahistorianofGermanResistance. RobertBartwastrappedbecausehecouldnotresistseeinghiswifeandson.Unbeknownto Moscow,theGestapokeptthefamiliesofallmissingpoliticalsuspectsundersurveillance:Bart’s desertiontotheRussianshadbeenassumed.Hiswifefellsick,andinAugust1942languishedina cliniconBerlin’sNollenstrasse.TheSovietagenttooktheunderstandablebutinsaneriskofvisiting her.Hewasbetrayedbyanurse,andarrestedattheclinicon9September.Almostimmediately thereafterhebegantotransmittoMoscowunderSDcontrol.Helaterclaimedtohavegivenan agreedMorsewarningon14October,whichaninexperiencedCentreoperatorfailedtonotice– exactlyashappenedwhenSOEwirelessesinHollandbecamepartofanotherAbwehrradiogame. Centreobliginglyrespondedbyprovidingdetailsoftheprocedureformeeting‘Breitenbach’.InmidDecember1942WillyLehmann,nowfifty-eightyearsoldandsurelyawearymanafterhisprotracted secretservice,wastelephonedathomeonenighttohearMoscow’scodedintroductionofthecalleras ‘collegePreuss’–‘colleaguePreuss’.Lehmannpresumablygavetheappropriateresponse:‘Come andseemeinmyoffice.’Thissignifiedarendezvousat5p.m.nextdayonthepavementof Kantstrasse,betweentwocinemasofwhichonewasnamedtheOlympia.Thecontactprocedurewas toapproachLehmannandaskdirectionstohisstreet.Hewassupposedtoreplythathelivedthere, andwouldwalkthemantoit. TherendezvouswasdulymadebyayoungGestapomannamedOlenhorst.Lehmannwasarrested andinterrogated,nodoubtexhaustively,thensecretlyexecutedafortnightlater,andhisbody cremated.Hiswife,whoknewnothingofhisworkfortheSoviets,wastoldthathehadperishedwhile onamission;theGestapowasprobablyanxioustoconcealthefactthatoneofitsownhadbeena traitor.Lehmann’sfatewasconfirmedonlyinMay1945,whenanNKVDteamfounddocumentation mentioninghisdemiseintheruinsofGestapoheadquartersinBerlin’sPrinz-Albrecht-Strasse.Bart survivedthewarandsurrenderedtotheAmericans,whopromptlyhandedhimovertotheRussians. Hewasexecutedbyfiringsquadon23November1945,thoughheenjoyedthedoubtfulsatisfaction ofbeingrehabilitatedbytheRedArmy’schiefmilitaryprosecutorin1996. ZoyaRybkinarecordsthatsheandherhusbandinStockholmweresubjectedtobitter recriminationsfromCentrefollowingthecollapseoftheOrchestra;inthecourseofatrawlfor scapegoatsthatstraddledhalfEurope,itwassuggestedthatSchulze-Boysenandtheresthadbeen betrayedbytheSwedishbusinessmanwhomtheyhadrecruitedtocarrycodestoBerlin.‘Kin’was recalledtoMoscowinthesummerof1943,andformonthshiswifewasobligedtocontinueserving theNKVD’sStockholmstationwhileignorantofwhetherhehadbeenshot.Shewrote:‘Centrekept sendingtelegramsenquiringaboutcasesthat“Kin”hadbeeninchargeof,andIcouldn’tunderstand why.’SheherselfreturnedtoMoscowinMarch1944,whereshefoundthatherhusband’sentire Jewishfamily,saveoneyoungerbrother,hadperishedatGermanhands.Afterprotracted investigationsandmonthsunderfantasticsuspicionofhavingthrownintheirlotwithBritish intelligence,bothRybkinandhiswifewererehabilitatedandrestoredtofavourascolonelsinthe Lubyanka. ExposureoftheRoteKapellehadtwoimportantconsequencesforHitler ’sregime.First,it representedavictoryfortheRSHA,whosemenclosedthenetwhiletheAbwehrremainedoblivious. Second,itseverelydamagedthestandingofGöring,whoseministrywasshowntoberiddledwith communisttraitors:theReichsmarschallhadgivenawaythebrideattheSchulze-Boysens’wedding.If thefailureoftheLuftwaffeintheairwasamoreimportantcauseofGöring’sfallfromgrace,the RoteKapelleaffairwasasubordinateone.InRussia,‘thefatman’wouldhavebeenshot.Asforthe Alliedcause,muchhasbeenmadeoftheAbwehr ’sdestructionofSOE’sandMI6’sDutchnetworks (describedbelow),butthefateofMoscow’sRedOrchestrawasafargravermatter,becauseits sourceshadaccesstomoreimportantsecrets.BetweenthemtheRoteKapelle,‘Lucy’Ringand Treppernetworksclaimed117informants:forty-eightinGermany,thirty-fiveinFrance,seventeenin Belgium,seventeeninSwitzerland.LeopoldTrepperhimselfforsomemonthsescapedarrest,though hisinformantsinFrance,BelgiumandHollandweresweptup.Theveteranspywasseizedonlyon24 November,inaParisdentist’swaiting-room.Thereafterheappearstohavetalkedfreelytothe Germans,apparentlywithoutneedforrecoursetoviolentmethods;heevendispatchedinvitationsfor informantstoattendrendezvousesatwhichtheywerearrested.AlltheRussians’codesfellintothe handsoftheSD. ThevictoriousGermansdealtswiftlyandruthlesslywiththeirhome-growntraitors.Harro Schulze-BoysenhadbeenarrestedattheAirMinistryon31August1942.Aweeklater,Harnackand hiswifeMildredwereseizedwhileonholiday.ThecondemnedprisonerFlorestansingsin Beethoven’sFidelio,‘MyheartisatpeaceforIhavedonewhatisright,’andHarnackseemstohave cherishedthesamesentiment.WhileFlorestanwassavedatthelast,however,theBerlinspieswere not.On22December1942,sixmenandthreewomen,membersoftheRedOrchestra,were guillotinedatPlötzenseejail.OnthesamedaySchulze-BoysenandHarnack,togetherwiththe former ’swifeLibertas,sufferedcontrivedlylingeringdeathsbyhanging.Harnackwroteinalast lettertoMildredthat‘despiteeverything’,helookedbackonalife‘inwhichthedarknesswas outweighedbythelight’.Alltheirbodiesweredispatchedforanatomicaldissection,inorderthatthe remainsshouldbeunidentifiable. TheGestaporetained116otherRoteKapelleprisoners,ofwhomalmosthalfwereexecutedonce protractedinterrogationshadbeencompleted.AmongthesewastheAmericanMildredHarnack.She wasinitiallysentencedtoameresixyears’hardlabour,butHitlerintervenedpersonallytoinsistupon aretrialatwhichshewascondemnedtodeath.ShespentsomeofherlasthourswithPastorHarald Pölchau,aprisonchaplainwhosolacedhundredsofHitler ’spoliticalvictims;sheaskedhimtorecite the‘PrologueinHeaven’fromFaust,beforeherselfsinging,‘Ipraytothepoweroflove’.Herlast, wonderingwordsbeforebeingbeheadedon16February1943were:‘AndIhavelovedGermanyso much.’Shewasjustforty,andherfairhairhadturnedwhiteduringhermonthsofconfinement.She musthavefeltafar,farjourneyfromWisconsin. SomuchsentimenthasbeenlavisheduponthemenandwomenoftheRedOrchestrathatit deservestobenoticedthattheirespionageactivitiesrenderedthemequallyliabletocapital punishmentunderBritishorAmericanjurisdiction.Butthecouragewithwhichtheyworkedagainst Hitlercommandstherespectofposterity,foralltheirillusionsabouttheSovietUniontheysoughtto serveinstead.Cynicsmayask:whatrenderedHarnack,Schulze-Boysenandtheircomradesmorally superiortosuchBritishandAmericantraitorsasKimPhilbyandAlgerHiss?Tobesure,they resistedonetyranny,buttheychosetoserveanotherthatwasequallyrepellent.Anyanswertothat questionmustbesubjective,butitseemsincomparablyeasiertojustifytreasonagainstamurderous dictatorshipthanagainstademocracygovernedbytheruleoflaw. AnatoliGourevitchwroteinhismemoirsaboutthedaysfollowinghisarrestinNovember1942: ‘Thenopenedthedarkestperiodofmylife,andthatofMargaret.’TheGermansatfirsttreatedthe couplewithremarkablecourtesyastheytravellednorthfromMarseilles.Theywerefedinrestaurants andgenerouslypliedwithwine.Initialexchangeswiththeircaptorstooktheformofconversations ratherthaninterrogations.Atnightduringthelongcarjourneytheywereallowedtosharea bedroom,thoughtheirclotheswereremovedandtheyweredeniedknivesandforksatthebreakfast table.TheygavetheescortmoneytobuythecigarettesGourevitchsmokedincessantlyashestroveto decidewhattoconfessortodeny.Afterthreedaysontheroadthelittlepartyfoundthemselvesonce moreinBelgium,atthefortofBreendonk,whereGourevitchandMargaretwereplacedinseparate cells.Theirfoodcontinuedtobeexcellent,however,andthequestioningwascivil.HansGiering, leaderoftheRedOrchestrainvestigation,wasjoinedbyanAbwehrofficer,HarryPipe,whomthe Russianfoundthoroughlyinformedabouthisactivities.GourevitchpersuadedtheGermansthathe neededtranslationoftheirquestions,tobuytimetodeviseresponses.Helateradmittedthathewas disorientatedbyhiscaptors’affabledemeanourandconsiderateconduct. WhilepartsoftheGRUman’smemoirofhisexperiencesseemcredible,thenarrativeofevents followinghisarrestcontainsirreconcilableinconsistenciesandobviousimplausibilities.He,and afterwardsTrepper,weretreatedgenerouslynotbecausetheGestapodiscoveredvirtueinhumanity, butbecausetortureprovedunnecessary.Itwillneverbeknownhowfartheirrevelations,asdistinct fromthoseofotherGRUagentsandwireless-operators,wereresponsiblefortheGestapo’sround-up oftheirinformants.Alllaterblamedeachother.TheGermanstoldGourevitchthatMakarov– ‘Chemnitz’–hadnamedhimaschiefofSovietintelligenceinBelgium.WhentheGRUmandenied this,GieringorderedguardstofetchanothercapturedMoscowagent,‘Bob’–HermannIsbutski– whowasbroughtforthfromhiscellabrokenman,plainlythevictimoftorture.Heimmediately identifiedGourevitch,whowasstunnedbytheencounter.Theinterrogationscontinuedforhourson end,thoughGieringprovidedplentifulfood,coffeeandevenbrandy.Afteraboutaweek,theGerman producedtwodevastatingdocuments:first,Moscow’sinstructionfor‘Kent’totraveltoBerlintomeet HarroSchulze-Boysen;second,hissubsequentreporttoCentre.Itwasplain,saidtheRussian,thatthe Gestapohelddecryptsofsomeofhiswirelessmessages,retrievedfromoneoftheoperators. HewasallowedameetingwithMargaret,lateatnight,andfoundhershatteredbyherexperiences, whichisunsurprisingsinceGourevitchclaimedthatshehadnopreviousknowledgeofhisespionage activities,noreventhathewasnottheUruguayan‘VincenteSierra’.AnorderarrivedatBreendonk: GourevitchandBarczaweretobetakenforthwithtoBerlin.Nextdaytheysetoffathighspeed,the twoprisonersseatedbetweenarmedguards.Thecarscarcelyhalteduntilitdrewupoutsideahuge, greybuildinginHitler ’scapital:thiswas8Prinz-Albrecht-Strasse,Gestapoheadquarters.The Russianwastakentoacell,whilehiscompanionwasremovedtoawomen’sprisonon Alexanderplatz.AlthoughGourevitch’smemoirssaynothingabouthisterrors,theweeksthat followedmusthavebeenrepletewiththem.HemetGestapochiefHeinrichMuller,andwasshownthe evidenceofhisdealingswiththeRedOrchestra.HewasconfrontedwithIlseStöbe,whomhehad failedtomeetonhisearliertriptoBerlin,butwhowasnowravagedbytorture,herappearance ‘terrifying’.AninterrogatorsoughttosuggestthattheSchulze-Boysensweresexuallydepraved,and producedphotographsofLibertasnakedtosupporthiscase.GourevitchwastoldthatLeopold TrepperwasnowheldinFresnesprison,andwascooperating.Hehimselfremainedinsolitary confinementinthecellsofPrinz-Albrecht-Strasseformorethanamonth.Onemorningashewas beingescortedtothelatrinehepassedHarroSchulze-Boysen.Neithermangaveanyhintof recognition.TheRussiansaidthathisformerdiningcompanionshowednovisiblesignsofhaving beentortured:‘Ididnotknowthathehadonlyafewdaystolive.’ AttheendofDecember1942,GourevitchwastakenbacktoParis.Hewastobecomeaparticipant withTrepperinaGestaporadiogamewithMoscow,whichcontinuedthroughmanymonthsthat followed.HehimselfwasbrieflyheldinFresnes,thentransferredtoHansGiering’sheadquartersin theRuedesSaussaies.GourevitchafterwardsclaimedthatheresistedforsomemonthsGerman blandishmentsactivelytojointheFunkspiel.ItisamatterofrecordthatTrepper ’stransmitterbegan tooperateunderGermancontrolonChristmasDay1942,whilethatofGourevitchcametolifeon3 March1943,butthelattercanonlyhavebeenallowedtoleaveBerlinforParisoncetheGermans wereconfidentoftheirdominionoverhim. Afewmonthslatertheentire‘turned’Sovietteamwasmovedintoaspacioushouseonthe BoulevardVictorHugoinNeuilly,outsideParis.TrepperandGourevitchalikeoccupiedspacious quarterswiththebestoffood,abletowashandirontheirownclothes.InJuly1943,advancedthroat cancerobligedGiering–whodiedinthefollowingmonth–toresignhispostinfavourofHeinz Pannwitz.InSeptemberTrepperescapedwhileonanescortedshoppingtripintoParis,without apparentlycausingmuchconcerntohisjailers,whohadbythenextractedfromhimalltheywere evergoingto.HesuccessfullyresumedcontactwithGeorgiedeWinter,andthetworemainedin hidingwiththeassistanceoftheso-called‘Spaak’Resistancegroup.TheGermanssofarrelaxed Gourevitch’scaptivitythathereturnedtoParis,wherehewaspermittedtocohabitwithMargaret Barcza;sheproducedasonnamedSachainmid-April1944.TheSonderkommandowhichpresided overthiscosyarrangementwasastrangelyill-assortedgroupthatincludedaprettyyoungEnglish girlnamedToniaLyon-Smith,whosestatuspuzzledvisitors:shemendedclothesandmadetea,and wasneverallowedoutofthebuildingunescorted,butitlateremergedthatshehadbecomethe mistressofGestapointerpreterKarlGagel.Herstorywaspathetic:thedaughterofaBritishArmy officer,attheageoffourteenshehadbeencaughtinBrittanyin1940withhernannyandteddybear whentheGermansoverranFrance.Thereaftershespentsometimeinaninternmentcamp,then roamedthecountryforawhilebeforetakingtemporaryresidencewiththeSpaakResistancegroup. SheappearstohavehadsomecontactwithTrepperandGeorgiedeWinterontherun,andindeed wrotealettertoafriendaskinghertohousedeWinter–whichtheGermansfoundontheAmerican girlwhenshewascaptured.TheBritishlatersuspectedLyon-SmithofrevealingSpaakgroupsecrets whensheherselffellintoGestapohandsinmid-1943,achargeshedeniedfortherestofherlife.Her experienceisyetanotherofthecountlesssmallmysteriescontainedinthestoryoftheTrepperring. ItwillneverbeknownhowfarPannwitz’sindulgencetowardsGourevitchreflectedthedepthofthe latter ’scollaboration,ortheformer ’sconcernforhisownfuture.AccordingtotheGRUman,the Gestapoofficerrecognisedthatthewarwaslost,andhadbecomedesperatetoavoidWesternAllied captivitybecausehehadledNaziretributionforthe1942murderbySOE-trainedCzechsofReinhard Heydrich,includingthemassacreoftheinhabitantsofLidice.GourevitchpersuadedtheGermanthat hewouldreceiveawarmwelcomeinMoscow,andnodoubtbelievedthathecouldimprovehisown prospectsbyreturninghomewithaseniorGestapoofficerasapersonaltrophy.Gourevitchsustained acloserelationshipwithPannwitzuntiltheyretreatedtoGermanybeforePariswasliberated, returningonlyinMay1945.MeanwhileLeopoldTrepperremainedsafelyinhidinguntiltheAllies overranhisrefugeinSeptember1944. Afterthebreak-upoftheRedOrchestra,the‘Lucy’RingbecameMoscow’sonlymeansofaccess toBerlin’shighplaces.Unfortunately,however,justasunauthorisedsexualpassionshadcaused complicationsforTrepperandGourevitch,sotheydidalsofortheSwissspies.AlexanderRadó suddenlydecidedthathewasinlovewiththewireless-operatorMargritBolli,whowashalfhisage. Withalmostinsaneindiscretion,hebeganvisitinghereveryday.Tofacilitatetheirmeetingshe himselfstayedinGenevawhilerentingaflatforhisfamilyinBern. Thisstorydescendedintoblackfarcewhenthegirldecidedthatshewasinlovewithsomeoneelse –ahandsomeyounghairdressernamedHansPeter,whowasaplantcodenamed‘Romeo’,controlled fromtheGermanconsulatebyAbwehrofficerHermannHensler.TheTreppernetwork’smenin GermanhandshadidentifiedRadó,andtheGermanssetaboutclosingdownboththeagentandhis contacts.Bolliwassobewitchedbyher‘Romeo’thatsheinvitedhimtodallyintheflatwhereshe kepthertransmitter.TheSwisspolicehadhithertoshownastubbornreluctancetoactagainstthe ‘Lucy’Ring,butitsactivitieshadnowbecometooconspicuoustoremainignored.On27October 1942,EdmondandOlgaHamelwerearrested.Theymanagedtohidetheirtransmitter,andwere eventuallyreleased,buttheirdaysinMoscow’sservicewereended.TheAbwehrsucceededin readingsomeoftheGRU’sSwissmessagesduring1942,whichrevealedastringofagents’ codenames.On16March1943thebesottedBollisentanenclairwirelesssignalto‘Romeo’,which furtherassistedGermanintelligence.TheAbwehrnowhadRadóandmostoftheRingunder intensivesurveillance,andexertedimmensediplomaticpressureontheSwisstoarrestthem. FromJune1943onwards,AlexanderFooteknewthathetoowasbeingwatchedby‘thedoctor ’– localpolice.HetoldMoscowthathecouldnotsafelytransmitmorethantwiceaweek,buttheGRU withcharacteristicruthlessnessinsistedthatheshouldmaintainamuchmoreintensiveschedule, whichmadethedirection-finders’taskeasy.Earlyonthemorningof20Novembertherewasa dramaticrushofmenintohisflat.OneofthempresentedapistolandcriedinGerman,‘Händehoch!’ ForaghastlymomentFootefearedthathisvisitorswerefromtheAbwehr.Itusuallysuitedthe warringnationsthatthereshouldbenoviolencebetweentheirrespectiveagentsinSwitzerland,but therecouldalwaysbeafirsttime.TheEnglishmanwasoneofthefewlocalspieswhocarriedagun, a.32automatic:‘itgavememoralcomfortatsomeofmymoredifficultrendezvous’.Butnowthat Footewascornered,itneveroccurredtohimtotrytoshoothiswayout. HeexperiencedasurgeofreliefwhenhefoundthathewasmerelyinthehandsoftheSwisspolice, whoseinterceptorshadpinpointedhistransmitter.Beforebeingtakenawayhemanagedtoswallow somemessagesandnamesconcealedinsideatorch.Heafterwardsclaimednottohavedislikedthe prisontowhichhewascommitted:‘ForthefirsttimeforyearsIwasabletorelaxcompletely.’He waspermittedtowearhisownclothesandeatfoodbroughtinfromoutside.On8September1944he wasreleased,thoughhisroleinthe‘Lucy’Ringwasatanend. Onebyone,Moscow’sotheragentsinSwitzerlandwereremovedfromcirculation.Amongthem wasAnnaMueller,aveteranSovietinformantwhomAlexanderFootedescribedas‘amotherlyold soulwholooked–andIhavelittledoubt,inthepast,hadactedas–asuperiorcharwoman’.Mueller wasthecut-outbetweenthenetworkandacorruptofficialintheSwisspassportoffice.Shewaslured toGermanybyaphoneymessagesayingthathersister-in-lawinFreiburgwassick,discoveredtoo latethatitwassentbytheGestapo,andspenttherestofthewarinaconcentrationcamp.Footenoted drylythattheGRUneverpaidherasinglemarkorfrancinrecompenseforhersufferingsforthe socialistcause. RachelDüberndorfer–‘Sisi’–afterbeingarrestedbytheSwissandchargedwithespionage claimedathertrialthatshewasworkingfortheBritishsecretservice,inhopesthatthiswouldsecure moregeneroustreatmentfromthelocalauthorities.Althoughsentencedtotwoyears’imprisonment, shewasindeedsoonbailedandallowedtodisappear.ButtheclaimfuelledtheNKVD’sdarkest suspicions,andcausedherarrestandconfinementintheLubyankaonarrivalinMoscowin1945. AlexanderRadówentintohidingfollowingthearrestsofhiswireless-operators,andeventually crossedsecretlyintoFrance,wherehelivedundergrounduntiltheliberation.RudolfRösslerwas arrestedbytheSwisspoliceinMay1944andremainedincustodyuntilSeptember.Hewasthen released,butthe‘Lucy’Ring’sgamewasplayedout. TheRussiansafterwardsclaimedthatinearly1944theyhadninety-sevenagentsoperatinginside Germany,ofwhomtenwereGermans.Amongthemostactive(saidMoscow)was‘Ian’–Ferenz Pataki,aHungarianwhohadonceworkedfortheCheka,whowaseventuallybetrayedandexecuted. ‘Dozen’,HermannSalinger,wasaformerInternationalBrigadefighterwhowasdroppedinto GermanyinJanuary1944–withBritishhelp,accordingtotheRussians,thoughthereisnorecordof ‘Dozen’inWesternfiles.‘Sharp’,HeinzGlodjai,wasparachutedintoEastPrussiain1943,and providedintelligenceuntilhewaskilledintheRAF’sAugust1944bombingofKönigsberg. Nonetheless,itisonethingtoboast,asdothemodernofficialchroniclersofRussianintelligence, abouttheNKVD’sandGRU’sGermansourcesinthelatterphasesofthewar,andanothertoshowthat theseproduceduseful,usableinformation,whichseemsunlikely.Followingthebreak-upoftheRed Orchestra,AbwehrinterceptorsfailedtofindanyfurtherevidenceofAlliedagentstransmittingout ofGermany,anditseemsreasonabletodiscountsuggestionsthattheNKVDandGRUdeployed substantialnumbersofactiveagentsinsidetheReichbetween1943and1945.CertainlynoRussian covertsourceinGermanygeneratedintelligenceremotelyasauthoritativeasthatproducedearlierby theRedOrchestraandthe‘Lucy’Ring.Inthelastyearsofthewar,however,strategicintelligencehad becomemuchlessimportant,becauseRussiandominanceofthebattlefieldwasoverwhelming. Moreover,despitetheSoviets’convictionthattheWesternAlliesdeniedthemimportantmaterial,the BritishandAmericansroutinelyinformedMoscowaboutallGermanmilitaryactivityrevealedby Ultrawhichthreatenedtheirinterests,ormightassistSovietoperations.Centredidnot,ofcourse, returnthecourtesy. 10 Guerrilla 1 R ES I S TER S A ND R A I D ER S Veryoccasionallyinthecourseofthewar,amarriagebetweenintelligenceandmilitaryaction provedperfectlyarranged.AthisParisflatintheavenuedelaMotte-Picquet,onthenightof24 January1942,GilbertRenault–theGaullistResistancenetworkchief‘ColonelRémy’–decrypteda radiomessagefromLondon.Itdeliveredarequestwhichconstitutedaverytallorderindeed:to obtain,atutmostspeed,detailsofconditionsprevailingaroundaGermanChannelcoastalinstallation atSaint-Bruneval,nearCapd’AntiferinNormandy;andmeanwhile‘todeceivebochesineventyour agenttakenbereadytoreplytosamequestionnotonlyforplacechosen,butforthreeorfourother similarplacesoncoast’.Renault,thirty-sevenyearsold,leanandintenselypatrioticbutrejectedas over-ageformilitaryservicein1939,wasoneofthemoreremarkablefiguresofthesecretwar.His Catholicismwasasignificantmotivationalforceinhisworkasanagent,andhewroteferventlylater: ‘Iwouldneverhavebeenabletocarryoutthisassignmentinaforeigncountryorforalessrighteous cause.’HedescribedhisResistanceroleas‘puttinglivingtileuponlivingtile’,andrecruited informantsfromaremarkablerangeofbackgrounds:ex-militarymenandarchitects,peasantsand aristocrats.Thoughhimselfanextremeconservative,inthesacredcauseofFrancehesuppedwith communists.HewasviewedinLondonastoocarelessaboutsecurityandtradecrafttobeagreat spymaster,butheenjoyedaremarkablerunbeforetheseweaknessesundidhim.Nowhedispatched RogerDumont,aformerairforceofficercodenamed‘Pol’–forPolRogerchampagne–to reconnoitreBruneval. AttheendofJanuaryanother‘Rémy’contact,aLeHavregarageproprietornamedCharles Chauveau,drovetoParisinhisSimca5topickupDumont,adoptingfalsenumberplatesforthelast kilometresintothecapital.ThetwomenthenreturnedtoLeHavre–amidGermansurveillancethat merecarjourneywasadangerousventure.Attheporttheagenttookaroominashabbyhotelso coldthathecouldnotsleep,butinsteadshiveredthroughthenight,fullydressedonachair.Next morningheandChauveaurattledtwelvemilesnorthtoBruneval,withchainsontheSimca’styresto contendwithafreshsnowfall.TheownerofthelittleHôtelBeauminetinthehamlet,PaulVennier, wasafriendofChauveau,amanwhomthegaragisteendorsedas‘oneofthebest’.Vennierwasable toenumeratetheLuftwaffecrewbilletedinthebigfarmcompoundatTheuville,andtotellthem aboutaguardpostatavillabythebeach,‘StellaMaris’.HereportedthatthelocalWehrmacht garrison,aplatoonstrongcommandedbyanefficientandenergeticFeldwebel,waslodgedinthe Beauminet.Vennierknewnothingaboutwhatwashappeningatthelonelyhouseandneighbouring ‘radiostation’halfamileawayontheclifftop,butatDumont’surgingheledhimdowntothe Germanwireentanglementjustshortoftheseasidetoseeforthemselves.Aconversationwitha friendlysentryrevealedtothespythatasupposedminefieldabovethebeachwasafiction,todeter intruders.Havingexploredtheareaaswellasanymancould,DumontreturnedtoLeHavre,and thencetoParis.Onthenightof9February,GilbertRenault’sSOE-trainedwireless-operator‘Bob’– RobertDelattre–MorsedtoLondontheagent’sreportonBruneval.Thefactthatthemissionhad succeededwithoutincidentshouldnotforamomentmaskthefactthatithadinvolvedalltheparties concernedinmortalrisk.Dumont’saccountofBrunevalmadeplainthatitwasgarrisoned,butnotin greatstrength. Thequestfortechnicalintelligenceabouttheenemy’sweaponssystemswasanuntiring preoccupationofeveryparticipantinthewar.Itwaspursuedthroughspies,photographic reconnaissance,patrollingandprisonerinterrogation.Ifsoldiers,sailorsandairmenweresometimes sceptical,indeedcynical,aboutstrategicandpoliticalintelligence,theycouldallgrasptheimportance ofsecuringdataabouttechnologybeingemployedbytheenemy,sothatmeanscouldbedevisedto counterit.TheairwaroverEuropeengagedthemostsophisticatedequipmentavailabletobothsides, andinspiredcorrespondinglyfeveredeffortstounderstandeachother ’s.TheGermanshadtheeasier task,becausetheycouldexplorethewreckageofBritishandAmericanaircraftshotdownover Europe,fittedwiththelatestdevicestoaidnavigationandbomb-aiming.TheBritish,however, separatedfromtheairbattlefieldbytheChannel,dependedonthebrainpoweroftheirintelligence officersandscientiststopenetratetheLuftwaffe’ssecrets. Inthewinterof1941theyrealisedthatGermannight-fighterswereguidedfromthegroundbytwo linkedradarsystems,codenamed‘Freya’and‘Würzburg’.R.V.Jones,thetwenty-nine-year-old assistantdirectorofscientificintelligenceattheAirMinistryandadvisertoMI6,togetherwiththe ‘boffins’oftheTelecommunicationsResearchEstablishmentthenatSwanage,identifiedtheseaskey elementsintheso-called‘KammhuberLine’,anetworkofguidancestationsthatenabledthe LuftwaffetoinflictpunitivelossesontheRAF’sBomberCommand.TheyknewthatFreyas,withtheir hugeaerialarrays,monitoredBritishbombers.TheyguessedthatWürzburgsguidedthefighters,but hungeredforanopportunitytodissectaspecimen.On5December1941,ayoungSpitfirepilotofthe RAF’sPhotographicReconnaissanceUnit,TonyHill,carriedoutalow-levelsweepofthelonely clifftopchâteauatBruneval,fromwhich53-cmradartransmissionshadbeendetectedinBritain. JonesporedoverHill’spictures,whichshowedaFreyasetashortdistancefromthehouse,andwhat thepilotdescribedasa‘bowlheater ’sometenfeetindiameter–obviouslyaparabolicreceiver whichwassurelythatofaWürzburg–somefourhundredyardssouthwards. Thesitewasonlyastone’sthrowfromthesea,lessthanaquarterofamilefromabeach.Itwas protectedbynovisibleobstacles,suchaswireentanglements.Surelyitshouldbepossiblefora daringraidingpartytogetin–thenmoreimportant,out,havingsecuredpricelessbooty.Joneshad alreadyachievedanentréetotheinnermostcouncilsoftheBritishwarmachinebyhisbrilliant1940 workontheLuftwaffe’selectronicnight-bombingguidancesystems.Now,hisproposalforadescent onBrunevalwasenthusiasticallyacceptedbytheAirStaff,DowningStreetandCombinedOperations HQ.Itwasdecidedthattheattackersmustlandfromtheair,thenescapebysea. AcompanyofthenewlyformedParachuteRegiment,the‘RedBerets’,commandedbyMajorJohn Frost,wasbriefedandtrainedtolandjusteastofthehouseanditsnearbyinstallation,thenseizeboth inaswiftcoupdemain.AsectionofengineersledbyLt.DenisVernonwasdetailedtodismantlethe setandremoveitskeycomponents,aidedbyanRAFradarmechanic,Flight-SergeantCharlesCox. CoxwasrushedthroughthejumpschoolatRingway,thenheandVernonwerebriefedbyJonesand settopractisingtheirroleonaBritishgun-layingradarset.Alltheraidersspenthoursmasteringthe topographyonadetailedscalemodelofBruneval.TrainingontheDorsetcoastwasdoggedbyvile weatherandrepeatedmishaps,wherebybothdroppingaircraftandshipsmadethewrongrendezvous. Thelastexercise,onthenightofSunday,22February,endedwiththeparatroopersstrugglingin chest-deepfreezingwaterassailorslabouredtoextricatethelanding-craftfromsandbanks.Allthis auguredillforthemission,asalsodidthegloomoverhangingtheRoyalNavyandtheBritishpeople aftertheChannelescapethepreviousweekofScharnhorstandGneisenau. Theraidmusttakeplacewithinthefivenightsofafullmoon,toprovidelightfortheRAFand Frost’smentoseetheirobjectives.Onthefirstthreepossibledatestheweatherwasunsuitable, dampeningthespiritsoftheraiders.Fridaythe27thofferedthelastpossiblewindow;itwasavast reliefwhen,at5p.m.,wordcamethattheoperationwas‘on’.TheassaultshipPrinsAlbert,carrying theseaborneelement,setforthundermotorgunboatescort.At9.52p.m.sixlanding-craftwere lowered,eachcarryingCommandobren-gunnersaswellasnavalcrews.Bycoincidence,evenas twelveWhitleybombersoftheRAF’s51SquadronflewsouthacrosstheChannelthatnight,bearing Frost’sparatroopers,aLysanderlightaircraftpassedthemheadingnorth,taking‘ColonelRémy’ fromFranceforameetinginLondonwithdeGaulle’sintelligencechief.Rémy’spartinOperation ‘Biteback’wasdone,evenasthatoftheraidersbegan. Justbeforetake-offfromThruxtoninWiltshire,thepartylearnedofafreshsnowfallinnorthern France.Thewhitecoverallspreparedforthiseventualityhadbeenleftbehindintheirtemporary barracksatTilney,butonbalanceFrostthoughtthesnowabonus,becauseitwouldgivehismen morelight.Abagpiperplayedawailingpibrochastheparachutistsboardedtheaircraft,which pleasedtheScotsamongthem.Theweatherwassuddenlyclearandfine,afterawildweek,andthe raiderstookoffwarmedbymugsoftealacedwithrum.Onceairbornetheysangoldfavourites– ‘AnnieLaurie’,‘TheRoseofTralee’,‘Lulu’.Aftertwohours,atafewminutespastmidnightthefirst ‘stick’plungedinsuccessionthroughholesinthefloorsoftheWhitleys,andaminutelatermost foundthemselvesmakingperfectlandingsinsoftsnow:Bruneval’sproximitytothecoastmade possibleuncommonlyaccuratenavigation.Mostofthemenurinatedbeforedoinganythingelse–in theair,Thruxton’steahadwreakedhavocwithbladders.AsFrostassembledhismen,hereflected ruefullythatonthisclearnighttheymustalreadyhavelostsurprise.Yetawonderfulsilencepersisted, andtherewasonlyonepieceofbadnews:twosections,twentymeninall,weremissing,having obviouslylandedoff-target. Therewasnotimetowaste,noquestionofsearchingforabsentfriends.Withintenminutesof landing,Frostledhisassaultpartyatafasttrottowards‘LoneHouse’–thechâteauwherethe Würzburgwasinstalled–whileasecondgroupsetforthtosecurethebeachfortheirretreat. Reachingthebuilding,themajorwasastonishedtofinditsdooropen.Heblewhiswhistleand chargedin,findingonlyoneGerman,whomtheykilledashefiredatthemfromupthestairs. MeanwhileLt.PeterYoung’spartyhadoverruntheWürzburgposition,whoseoccupantsfled, bewilderedbythecrackleofsmallarms.Flight-SergeantCoxtoreasidethecurtainmaskingthe entrancetothecabinintheradarpit,andfoundthesetstillwarm–ithadobviouslybeentrackinga Germanfighternotmanyminutesearlier.Lt.Vernon,leaderoftheRoyalEngineersteam,began takingflashlightphotographs,whichprovokedGermangunfirefromsomewhereoutinthedarkness. TheBritishfoundthattheWürzburgoccupiedarotatingplatformonaflatbedtruck,protectedby thickstacksofsandbags.Onesapperattackedthecasingwithahammerandchisel,removing Telefunkenlabelsandserialnumbers.Coxwasobligedtouseacrowbartopriseoffthetransmitter ’s fascia.Then,amidincreasinglyheavythoughill-directedgunfirefromGermansafewhundred metresaway,theBritishloadedkeycomponentsontoatrolleytheyhadbroughtforthepurpose.One ofFrost’smenwaskilledbyastraybullet,butVernon,Coxandtheothersremainedunscathed.The plancalledforthesapperstobegiventhirtyminutestoguttheGermanset.Afteronlyten,however, truckheadlightsshowedenemyreinforcementsapproaching.ThemajortoldVernontosettleforwhat heandhismenhadgot–whichincludedalltheelementsthatmatteredtoRegJonesandhis colleagues–andgetmoving. ThepartytaskedtoclearthebeachfoundthemselvesbrieflypinneddownbytheGermans; machine-gunfireseriouslywoundedCompanySergeant-MajorStrachan.AsFrost,Coxandthe othersbegantomovetowardsthecoast,theysawthattheGermanshadalreadyreoccupiedthe château.Suddenlytherewasanoutburstofheavyfiringfromthesouth-east:thetwosectionsdropped off-targethaddoubledtowardsBruneval,andnowattackedtheGermansfromtherear,alucky diversionwhichenabledtheircomradestoclearthewaytothebeach.Afewminutesofacutetension followed:Frost’sradiobeacon,summoningthenavy,failedtoelicitaresponse.OnlyaftertheBritish firedasuccessionofgreenflaresdidthelanding-crafthasteninupontherendezvous,totheintense reliefofthewaitingparatroopers.Shortlybefore3a.m.theraiders,togetherwithFlight-Sergeant Coxandhispreciouscargo,wereloadedaboard.OnceoffshoretheWürzburg’scomponentswere transferredtoanMGBwhichdashedforPortsmouthattwentyknots,leavingFrost’smentofollowat amoresedatepaceinthelanding-craft,towedbyothergunboats.Theattackersleftbehindonlytwo menkilledandsixmissing,whospenttherestofthewarincaptivity;theGermanslostfive,andthree morewerebroughtbacktoBritainasPoWs.At6o’clockthateveningof28Februarytheentireparty boardedthePrinsAlbert,whereatriumphantpressconferencewasheld.Inthatchillseasonof defeats,herewasatinybutinfinitelyprecioustriumphtowarmtheheartsoftheBritishpeople. TheBrunevalraidwasthemostsuccessfulsuchoperationofthewar.Throughasmallinvestment ofresources,andatnegligiblecost,MajorFrost’sparatroopersandFlight-SergeantCoxbrought homeforBritaintheintimatesecretsoftheWürzburgradar:itsaerial,receiver,receiveramplifier, modulatorandtransmitter.ThesesufficedtoenableR.V.Jonesandhiscolleaguestograspthesystem onwhichtheKammhuberlinewasbased–achainof‘boxes’,withineachofwhichFreyaand Würzburgradarsetsguidedanight-fighterontothetrackofabomber.Oncethiswasunderstood,the RAF’sresponsebecameobvious:topushaircraftthroughthenightskyoverthelineatmaximum density,swampingtheelectronicdefences.‘Streaming’worked,andrenderedKammhuber ’ssystem obsolete.Althoughbomberlossesremainedsevere,Brunevalprovidedapreciousintelligencebreak totheAllies.Moreover,initswaketheGermansfeltobligedtofortifytheircoastalradarchainso heavilythatthereaftereverystationwaseasilypinpointedbyphotographicreconnaissance. Theattackrepresentedatextbookcollaborationbetweenthe‘boffins’,ledbyJones,whoidentified whattheyneededtoknow;spiesontheground–‘ColonelRémy’s’men–whoreconnoitredthetarget forMI6;planners,whomarriedtheagentreportstodatasecuredbyairphotography;andspecial forces,whichexecuted‘Biteback’.Inadditiontothedecorationsawardedtotheairborneforce,Jones wasmadeaCBE.Theattackerswereaidedbythefactthatacoastaltargetwasrelativelyeasyforthe RAFandnavytofindandreach.InFebruary1942theFrenchcoastwasdefendedmuchlessheavily thanitbecametwoyearslater.Perhapsmostimportant,theBritishhadluckontheirside.‘Rémy’s’ agentswerenotcaught,assomanyspieswerecaught;theparachutedropwasrelativelyaccurate,as manydropswerenot;theGermansputuplittleeffectiveresistance;andCoxwasabletocarryaway thetreasure.Manytimesbetween1940and1945,Britishplannershadcausetolamentthatthecourse ofsecretwarseldomransosmooth. 2SOE FollowingthefallofFranceinJune1940,foralmostfouryearsWinstonChurchillwagedwarwith theconvictionthatBritain,evenaftertheaccessionofRussiaandtheUnitedStatesasfellow-foesof Hitler,lackedpowertoconfronttheNazis’militarymightontheContinent.Thismadeitessentialto challengetheenemybyothermeans–thestrategicbomberoffensiveagainstGermanyandguerrilla campaignsintheoccupiedcountries.ThecreationofBritain’sSOEandthePoliticalWarfare Executive,followedlaterbythatoftheAmericanOSSandOfficeofWarInformation,was encouragedbyadelusionthatHitler ’s1939–41Blitzkriegshadsucceededpartlybyexploitationofa ‘FifthColumn’ofsecretsupporterswithinthevictimnations.Manypeople,theprimeminister notableamongthem,believedthishadplayedthesameroleintheenemy’sonslaughtsassappersin siegesofold,whotunnelledbeneathcitywallsbeforestormingpartiesattacked.Hethussoughtto createhisownFifthColumntoservetheAlliedcause.Hefearedthatifthepeoplesofoccupied Europewerelefttotheirowndevicestheywouldremainsunkinpassivity,acquiescence, collaboration–andhewasprobablyright. InpromotingraidsandResistance,theprimeministerhadfourobjectives.Thefirst,andleast important,wastofulfilmilitarypurposes,whereinthereweremanyfiascossuchasOperation ‘Colossus’,a1941CombinedOperationsparachutedroptodestroyaCalabrianrailviaduct,the August1942Diepperaid,andsomeearlysabotageattemptsinNorway.Thesecondpurposewasto promoteamongBritishpeopleandacrosstheworldabelief–ill-foundeduntilatleastlate1942– thatthewarwasbeingenergeticallyandeffectivelycarriedon;whatthisauthorhaselsewheredubbed ‘militarytheatre’.AthirdobjectivewastoobligeHitlertoexpendresourcesontheinternalsecurity ofhisempire.Thefourth,andmostimportant,wastostimulatetension,recrimination,hatredbetween theNazisandtheirsubjectpeoples.Farfromacknowledgingthatactsofrepressionshouldprompta curbonResistanceactivity,ChurchillsawNazisavageryasfurtheringhisaims.‘Thebloodofthe martyrs,’hetoldameetingoftheCabinetDefenceCommitteeon2August1943,‘wastheseedofthe Church.’Thefactthatbythewar ’sendmostofEurope’soccupiedpeoplesloathedtheGermanswas partlyaconsequenceofpoliciesHitleranywayadopted;butitwasalsoattributabletotheinsurgencies sponsoredbyBritainandlatertheUS.ThemilitaryachievementsofResistancewereverymodest,the moralonesimmense. Operationsbyarmedciviliansbehindenemylineswerefarremotefromthedoingsofbespectacled mathematiciansandchessplayershuddledovercryptogramsatBletchleyPark,ArlingtonHallandthe NKVD’ssigintcentreintheoldSelecthotelonDzerzhinskyStreet.Nonetheless,guerrillacampaigns becamecriticalelementsofthesecretwar,eventuallycommandingresourcesaslargeasthose expendedonintelligence-gathering,andoftenoverlappingwithit.InJuly1940SpecialOperations Executivereceivedtheprimeminister ’smandateto‘setEuropeablaze’.Inhisdeterminationtowage anewkindofwarwithnewmenandnewmeans,heentrustedhisbrainchildtoHughDalton,the raffishministerofeconomicwarfareandaLabourMP,ratherthantothechiefsofstafforBroadway. Acabinetcolleaguetoldtheforeignsecretary,LordHalifax,‘Youshouldneverbeconsultedbecause youwouldneverconsenttoeverything;youwillnevermakeagangster.’Thoughtheoldsecret servicefoughtasfiercelyagainstitsupstartrivalasitdidagainsttheGermans,SOEeventually becameamoreeffectivebodythanMI6,andwasrunbyablerpeople. Between1940and1943,however,itsoperationsweredoggedbythefactoftheAxisPowers’ dominationofthestruggle.GermanyandJapanwereseenbymostinhabitantsofoccupiedterritories aswinners,whomitwasmadnesstochallenge.BentinckoftheJICtoldDaltonhewasthoroughly opposedtorousingthecivilianpopulationsofEurope:‘Thetimeisnotripe,andalotofunfortunate peoplewillbeshot.’Daltonshrugged:‘Thesearetheprimeminister ’sorders,andmustbecarried out.’Theminister,anambitiousandindiscreetmanmistrustedbymostofhiscolleagues,yearnedfor alivelierroleinthewareffortthanhisaridresponsibilityforadministeringblockade:stewardshipof Britain’sguerrillaoperationspromisedtoprovidethis.AnSOEofficerwrotelaterthatDalton,who aspiredtosupplantAnthonyEdenasforeignsecretary,‘tendedtogiveChurchillandothercabinet ministersforecastsofResistanceactivitiesbasedonassumptionsofawilltoresistinexcessofany realisticviews,untiltheaccessionoftheSovietUnionandUnitedStatestotheAlliedcausegavethe peoplesofoccupiedEuropearealhopeforanAlliedvictory’. Until1944,whenitbecameplainthatHitlerwouldsoonbedefeated,mostoftheContinental societieswantedtohavenothingtodowithrevolt,thefrightfulperilstotheirownhomesandfamilies ofassistingthedistantallies.JeanCocteau,amongthemorenotoriousFrenchintellectual collaboratorswiththeNazis,saidscornfullytoayoungpoetwhotoldhimthatheintendedtojointhe Resistance,‘Vousaveztort.Lavieestplusgravequeça’–‘Youarewrong.Lifeismoreseriousthan that.’PosterityisconfidentthatitwasCocteauwhowaswrong,butespeciallyintheearlywaryears hisviewwaswidelysharedamongthesocialandpoliticalelitesoftheEuropeannations.Inthedays beforetheGermansoccupiedYugoslaviain1941,SOEdistributedsevenwirelesssetstoprospective localstay-behindoperators,butnoneevertransmitted.Thehandfulofextraordinarilybrave inhabitantsoftheoccupiednationswhostartedResistancenetworksinthoseearlydays,suchpeople asMichelHollardandMarie-MadeleineFourcadeinFrance–intheircasesworkingwithMI6– deservethehighestadmirationforbreakingrankswiththeircowedfellow-countrymenlongbefore theAlliedcausebecamefashionable. RobertBruceLockhart,director-generalofthePoliticalWarfareExecutiveandaveteranofBritish secretserviceoperationsinRussiaaftertheBolshevikRevolution,spoketothechiefsofstaffon29 May1942aboutthelimitationsofResistance.Enthusiasts,hesaid,sometimesforgotthatlocal supportmustebbandflowwiththeAllies’perceivedmilitarysuccessorfailure.Britishprestigehad beengrievouslydamagedbyyearsofdefeats.Moreover,aruthlessoccupierenjoyedgreat advantagesovercivilianResisters:‘IntheRussianrevolutionof1905–6workerswithriflescould stillgetbehindbarricadesandputupashowagainsttroops,’readBruceLockhart’snotesofthe meeting.‘Todaynochanceagainstafewtanksandadive-bomberortwo.Taskofcontrollingmuch easier…Gestapo,anti-sabotageunitsveryruthless.’Heconcluded:‘Idon’tthinkmuchhopeof stimulatingresistancetoamoreactivestageuntilthereissomeconsiderablemeasureofAngloAmericanmilitarysuccess.Propagandacan’treplacemilitarysuccess…Weshouldnottryto promoteaprematurerevoltwhichcanbeeasilycrushed.’TheGermanpolicyofrepressionwas highlyeffectiveinstiflingrevoltamongmostoftheoccupiedpeoples. SOE’schiefsattributedtheslowgrowthofResistance,especiallyinFrance,tolackofarms:the RAFdeclinedtodivertbombersinsignificantnumberstosupplypartisansuntil1944,whenDowning Streetinsisted.However,theonlylikelyconsequenceofarmingResistersearlierinthewarwould havebeenthattheGermanskilledmoreofthem.Untrainedciviliansgivengunswerecapableof assassinationsandnuisanceattacks,butlarge-scaleclasheswiththeWehrmachtandSScouldhave onlyoneoutcome–bloodydefeat–aswasrepeatedlyprovenaslateas1944–45.AnOSSofficer, MacdonaldAustin,saidofthemaquis:‘Sometimestheywoulddomarvellousthings,butonehadto realisethatonthenextoperationtheycouldhaveforgottentocrankupthegazogènes’–thecharcoalfuelledcarsonwhichoccupiedFrancedependedformobility.ABritishSHAEFintelligenceofficer said:‘Youcouldnevermakeanymilitaryplandependentontheparticipationofguerrillas,because youcouldneverbesuretheywouldturnup.’ From1938untiltheestablishmentofSOE,MI6maintainedasmallsabotageunitknownas‘Section D’,runbyatall,lanky,absurdsappermajornamedLaurenceGrand,whoaffectedalongcigaretteholderandacarnationinhisbuttonhole.Grandwasafountofexoticideas,noneofwhichcameto much.IntheearlydaysofthewarhepromotedsuchstuntsaspayingSloveniangangstopoursand intotheaxle-boxesofrollingstockboundforGermany.AnewassistantwhojoinedGrandwas disbelievingwhenorderedtofundsomeEastEuropeansabotagegroupsbysendingthemcash throughthepost.NobodybelievedinGrand.TheForeignOffice’sGladwynJebbpressedforhis removal,writingcontemptuouslytoCadogan:‘TheonlygoodpointthatIhavebeenabletodiscover isthatheisgenerous&likedbyhisstaff,whichincludesoneortwoablepersons.Buttopitsucha managainsttheGermanGeneralStaff&theGermanMilitaryIntelligenceServiceislikearranging anattackonaPanzerdivisionbyanactormountedonadonkey.’ Hearingallthis,theprimeministerintervenedtoinsistthataneworganisationshouldbe establishedtomakemayhemacrossEurope,theBalkansandlatertheFarEast.SpecialOperations ExecutivewasinitiallyrunbySirFrankNelson,aformerimperialmerchant,MPand1914–18 intelligenceofficer.NelsonwasreplacedinMay1942bythebankerSirCharlesHambro,ofwhomde Gaulle’sintelligencechiefAndréDewavrinsaid:‘Acharmingfellow,butalmostinvisiblebecauseof hisinnumerableresponsibilitieselsewhere.’FromanearlystageSOE’smosteffectivepersonality provedtobeColinGubbins,itsdirectorofoperations,aHighlandsoldierwithabackgroundin militaryintelligencewhohadservedattheWarOfficeunderthefamouslyimaginativeirregular warriorCol.JohnHolland.InSeptember1943Gubbinsbecameamajor-generalandsucceeded Hambroasheadoftheorganisation. SOE–‘theracket’,asmanyofitsstaffirreverentlyreferredtoit–startedlifeat64BakerStreet, withacovernameastheInter-ServiceResearchBureau.By1945ithadexpandedtooccupysixacres ofofficespacebetweenBakerStreettubestationandPortmanSquare.Itrecruitedstaffvariously amongservicepersonnel,civilianswithspecialistknowledgeofoccupiedcountries,refugees,and adventurerswhofittedinnowhereelse.ItestablishedtrainingschoolsinsabotageatStevenage,black propagandaatWatford,fieldcraftatLochAilortandguerrillatechniquesatArisaig.Themost celebratedinstructorsattheschoolforsubversion,basedinAstonHousenearKnebworth,weretwo ex-Shanghaipolicemen,CaptainsFairburnandSykes,whowereallegedtoconcludealllessonsin unarmedcombatwiththewords,‘andthenkickhimintheballs’.AnotablefailingofMI6wasthatit madelittleattempttotrainitspersonnel,whowereexpectedtolearnonthejob,initsgentlemanamateurtradition.EvenBroadway’sofficialhistorianacknowledgesthatSOEprovidedgood instruction:severalofitstrainingschoolswereincorporatedintothepost-warsecretservice. FielddutywithSOEdemandedalmostentirelydifferentskillsfromthoseofMI6’speople.‘The manwhoisinterestedinobtainingintelligencemusthavepeaceandquiet,andtheagentsheemploys mustneverifpossiblebefoundout,’wroteBickhamSweet-Escott,whoservedinbothorganisations. Bycontrast,theagentsentintothefieldtopromoteguerrillawarisboundtomakeanoise,‘anditis onlytoolikelythatsomeofthemenheuseswillnotescape’.Intheearlydays,SOEmademany mistakesthatemphasiseditsinexperience.JackBeevor,alawyerandWorldWarIgunnerofficer,was postedtoitsstationinneutralLisbon,whereherentedaflatinhisownname.HethenallowedhisMI6 counterpartstouseitforameetingwithinformants,whichthelandlordreportedtothePortuguese authorities,whopromptlyexpelledtheSOErepresentative.Inthespringof1942amemberofanSOE landingpartywascapturedbytheItaliansontheMediterraneanislandofAntiparos;heprovedtobe carryingalistofBritishcontactsinAthens,anactofcarelessnesswhichcostthosehaplessGreeks theirlives.InIstanbulharbour,SOEplantedlimpetmineswhichfailedtoexplodeontankerscarrying RomanianoilfortheAxis. Sweet-Escottdescribedhow,intheworstearlydays,hesharedthewidespreadWhitehallbeliefthat theneworganisationwas‘nothingmorethanawickedwasteoftime,effort,andmoney…Our recordofachievement…wasnegligible.Butoursuccessorfailuredependedinthelastresortonthe willingnessofmenandwomeninenemy-occupiedterritorytorisktheirlivesintheAlliedcause… Theirreadinesstodosowastemperedbydoubtsastoourfinalvictory.Thisattitudeontheirpart limitedthescopeforsuccessfuloperationsonours.’In1941–42,SOEwasbesiegedwithrequeststo attacktargetsdeepinenemyterritory–forinstance,theLuftwaffe’sCondorlong-rangemaritime reconnaissanceaircraft,basedatairfieldsaroundBrest–butitsFrenchsectionlackedanylocal supporterstoundertakesabotage.TheAbwehrwasbemusedthattheBritishdidnotattackGermany’s vitalRomanianoilfields,astheyhaddoneinWorldWarI,butthereagainBakerStreetlackedmeans. AmongSOE’searlyassignmentswastoorganisedemolitionpartiestodestroyvitalinstallationsin thewakeofaGermaninvasionofBritain.Thereafter,itsetabouttrainingyoungmenandwomento belandedinoccupiedcountrieswherevercontactcouldbemadewithlocalsympathisers–noeasy task–andwhenevertheRAFwouldprovideaircraft,anevenbiggerconstraint.BakerStreet’sfirst bigsuccesswasOperation‘Rubble’inMarch1941,whereinGeorgeBinneystage-managedthe escapefromGothenburgofaconvoyofeightfreightersladenwithscarcecommoditiesand industrialmaterials,amissionthatuniformedpersonnelcouldnotundertake,becauseitbreached Swedishneutrality;asecondsimilarcoupwasstagedlaterintheyear.MeanwhiletheflamboyantGus March-PhillipsledaWestAfricanraidto‘cutout’the7,600-tonItalianlinerDuchessad’Aosta,which wasenjoyingPortuguesesanctuaryoffFernandoPó.Heseveredtheship’scablebeforetowingitinto internationalwaters,wheretheRoyalNavytookover.Operation‘Postmaster ’,asMarch-Phillips’ raidwaschristened,madeusefulpropaganda,becauseitshowedthelengthofBritain’sreach. SomeSOEschemesexploredthewildershoresoffantasyinafashionworthyoftheAbwehr.A January1942BakerStreetpaperproposedthatagentsshouldbedispatchedtorallyAfghantribes– Barakzais,FopalzaisandAlizais–onaprospectiveGermanlineofadvancetoIndia.Therewasalso aplantolaunchbiologicalwarfareagainstJapanbyparachutinghostileinsectsontoitscrops.An officerwhodiscussedwaysandmeanswithoneoftheNaturalHistoryMuseum’sexpertsinLondon reportedafterwards:‘Hetellsmethatbollweevilisnotthebestinsect.Afarmoreseriousthreat wouldbethepinkbollworm,platyedraGossypiellaSaunders,whichdoestenmillionpounds’worth ofdamageannuallyinEgypt.’UnliketheJapanese,however,whodidindeedlaunchbiological warfareinChina,BakerStreetneitherexperimentedonhumanguineapigs,norimplementedtheboll wormplan. SOEhadmanycritics.Ascornful1941cabletoLondonfromtheBritishembassyinBelgrade denouncedsuchyoungofficersasJulianAmery,committedto‘actionforaction’ssake’.Thiswasa widespreadcomplaintbydiplomatswhofailedtounderstandthat‘actionforaction’ssake’was exactlywhattheprimeministerwanted.WhiletheEuropeangovernmentsinexileinLondon favouredalow-profilepolicytowardsResistanceuntilthedayofliberationwasathand,Churchill soughtimmediate,conspicuousactsofarmeddefiance.Therewerefurthercriticismsaboutthereal usefulnessofSOE’sproclaimedachievements.ThedestructionoftheGorgopotamosviaductin Greecewasanotablefeatofarms,butthelong-intendeddemolitiondidnottakeplaceuntiltheendof November1942,whenBritain’sEighthArmywasalreadyadvancingwestwardsfromEgypt,andthus theGermansupplylinethroughGreecehadbecomeirrelevanttotheNorthAfricancampaign. EvenBakerStreet’sownmenconsideredthatsomeoperationsdidmoretofulfilthefantasiesofits adventurousyoungofficersinthefieldthantohastenAlliedvictory.BickhamSweet-Escottopposed oneoftheorganisation’smostfamouscoups,theCretankidnappingofaGermandivisional commander,becauseoftheinevitabilityoflocalreprisals.‘Thesacrificemightpossiblyhavebeen worthwhileintheblackwinterof1941whenthingsweregoingbadly,’helaterwrote.ByApril1944, however,whenSOE’sintrepidbuccaneerscarriedouttheoperationwhichbroughtthemfame,the murderousGen.FriedrichMüllerhadbeenreplacedbya‘comparativelyharmlessgeneralcalled [Heinrich]Kreipe…Theresultofcarryingitoutin1944,wheneveryoneknewthatvictorywas merelyamatterofmonthswould,Ithought,hardlyjustifythecost.’ Manylocalpeoplesinalloccupiedcountriesweremoreinterestedintheirownfactionalstruggles thaninacceptingordersfromLondonabouthowtoservetheAlliedcause.Bold,brashyoungmen andafewwomenfromSOEandOSSarrivedontheirthresholdsdemandingthattheyshouldsetaside localdifferencestopursuethesupremepurposeofdefeatingtheAxis.ButmanyFrenchmen,Greeks, Yugoslavs,Italians,Albanians,MalaysandBurmesespurnedsucharguments.Itmightsuitforeigners’ intereststofighttheGermans,Italians,Japanesetotheexclusionofallelse,butitdidnotsuitmany partisans.NoneoftheseBritishorUSofficersplannedtoliveintheircountriesafterthewar;the visitorshadnostake,beyondtheirownlives,whichtheyheldcheapastheyoungandunattacheddo, inthesocietiesonwhichtheysoeagerlyurgedrevolt. NigelCliveofMI6signalledareportfromGreeceinApril1944whichemphasisedthepopular expectationofliberationbymid-summer,andofferedashrewdforecast:‘Whatmattersmostiswhat willhappenthereafter.Thereisuniversalapprehensionoftheimmediateaftermathofliberationwhen itlooksasifthetownswillbecomethebattlefieldsofwhatisnowamountaincivilwar.Public clamourisforthefollowingthingsinthisorder:food,freedomfromtheGermanoccupationanda minimumofsecuritysothatasemblanceofdemocraticlifemaybeginagain.Nopoliticalmovement infreeGreeceiscapableofmeetingthelastrequirement.Allarmedpoliticalmountainparties engenderdifferentdegreesofmistrust.’ThesamewastrueinYugoslavia,whereunorthodoxlocal rulesofthegameprevailed:theGermanswereinfuriatedtodiscoverfromawirelessinterceptthatan ItaliangeneralcapturedbyGen.MihailovićandhisCetnikshadsubsequentlybeenfreedinexchange forthesurrenderofafieldgunandammunitiontothepartisans. InJanuary1943StewartMenziesstagedoneofhisfrequentexplosionsofwrathaboutSOEto RobertBruceLockhart,whorecordedtheconversation:‘Couldnothingbedoneaboutthisshow, whichwasbogusthroughandthrough?’‘C’demanded.‘Theyneverachievedanything,they compromisedallhisagents,andtheywereamateursinpoliticalmatters…[Menzies]reckonedthatif theycouldbesuppressedourIntelligencewouldbenefitenormously.’GuyLiddellofMI5wroteon3 April1943:‘Lackofunitybetweenourselves,[MI6]andSOEisaseriousmenace.’Fractioushorsetrading,aswellasbittersquabbles,someofthemcomic,doggedtherelationships.InNovember1941 therewasanegotiationaboutcodenameswhichresultedinAirCommodoreArchieBoyleofSOE minutingClaudeDanseyatBroadway:‘TheGreekAlphabet,togetherwithnamesofmotorcars,big game,fruitandcoloursarereservedfor[MI6]…IhaveabandonedfruitsforSOEpurposes…I understandthatyouwillsuggestto[MI6]asadditionalcategories,musiciansandpoets,andIshall thereforekeepoffthem.’ChildishrivalrycausedBroadwayandBakerStreettorunseparatewireless organisations.Differencesinthefieldcouldbecomeextreme:SOEofficerSpikeMoranshotdead CostaLawrenceofMI6,anunhingedGreekwhobecamesofanaticallyenthusiasticaboutthe communistELASfactionthathetriedtobetraytotheGermanstheBritishteamattachedtotherival EDES. SOEalmostprecipitateditsowndemisebyasuccessionoffolliesthatcostlives,togetherwith massiveembarrassmentwhentheywererevealed.ByfartheworsttookplaceinHolland,andalso involvedMI6.Inthesummerof1941oneofBroadway’sagentswascapturedwithalargepileof backmessages–acommonsinofcommissionbysecretwireless-operators–whichenabledthe Abwehr,withtheaidofaGermancipherexpertnamedSergeantMay,tobreakitstraffic.On13 February1942twomoreMI6agentswerecaptured,oneofwhomtalkedfreely. MeanwhiletwoDutchSOEagentsweredroppedundercircumstanceswhichsuggestedfantastic carelessnessinBakerStreet:bothwereissuedwithforgedidentitycardsonwhichtheroyalarmsof Hollandwererepresentedbytwolionswhichbothfacedthesameway,insteadofaddressingeach other.Evenmoreincredible,HubertusLauwersandThysTaconiswereissuedwithidenticalcivilian clothes.WhentheyremonstratedwiththeirconductingofficerinthebriefingshedatNewmarket beforebeingdroppedonthenightof6–7November1941,hewavedasidetheirconcerns,sayingthat noonewouldnotice.Theyarrivedsafelynonetheless,andwenttoworkrespectivelyinTheHague andArnhem.TaconisreceivedassistancefromalocalmannamedRidderhof,whowasasecretVMann–aVertrauensmänner,orGermaninformer,ofwhichHollandhadmanyin1941.Everything TaconisdidwasreportedtotheAbwehr ’seffectiveandingeniousMaj.HermanGiskes.On6March 1942Lauwerswasseizedinmid-transmissionataflatinTheHague,carryingcopiesofseveralold messages.Whenheresumedtransmission,thereceivingoperatorfailedtonoticethathegavethe agreedsecuritywarningthathewasunderenemycontrol.Thereafter,agentafteragentwas parachutedintoHollandtobereceivedbyGiskes’men.Amidtheirshock,andbitternessatbetrayal, mostoftheprisonerstalked,sothateachnewsubjectforinterrogationwasdisorientatedbythe discoveryofhowmuchtheGermansalreadyknew.Lauwersinsertedfurtherwarningsinsubsequent transmissions,includingtheword‘CAUGHT’,buttheNSectioninLondonblithelyignoredthem. TherapidexpansionofSOEmeantthatmanyagents,andespeciallywireless-operators,were dispatchedintothefieldhastilytrained,asweremostoftheirWhaddonHallcounterparts.AnAbwehr interceptionspecialistlatercapturedbytheBritishexpressedscepticismaboutSOEradiodisciplinein France.AloisSchwarze,atwenty-four-year-oldNCO,saidthatmanyAlliedagentstransmittedvery slowly;theyreportedtheintendedtimingsoftheirnextscheduleinplainlanguageorverysimple code;theirthree-lettercallsignswereeasytopickup,asweretheir‘hellos’and‘goodbyes’.Heand hiscolleagueswereamazedhowoftencapturedwireless-operatorshadfailedtonoticethattheywere beingmonitoredbyGermandirection-finders.Theywerealsooftencaughtinpossessionofcopies ofoldsignals,inthefashionoftheDutchmen.Muchofthislackofprofessionalismwasinevitable whencivilianswererushedthroughtrainingasspiesanddispatchedintothefield,butmorethana fewmenandwomenpaidforitwiththeirlives. Itisamyth,vividlyexposedbytheDutchexperience,thatAlliedagentsandResistanceworkers whofellintoGermanhandsseldomtalked.Almosteveryprisonerofanynationalitygaveawaya littleormuch,withorwithoutundergoingtorture.Controllersexpectedonlythattheirfieldofficers andagentsshouldwithholdnamesforaminimumoftwenty-fourorforty-eighthours,toenable meetingstobecancelled,contactstoflee.TheGestapoinParisemployedLatvian,Dutchandindeed Frenchcollaboratorstoconductthetortureofprisoners,whileGermanofficersaskedthequestions. Capturedagentswereusuallyoffereda50percentchanceoflifeiftheytalked,andsuchbargains weresometimeskept.AnSDinterpreternamedCorporalWeigel,whotookpartinmany‘extreme interrogations’atVersailles,recalledthenamesofjusttwoprisonerswhoremainedsilent:onewasa MadameZiegler,whomhebelievedtobeAlsatian,theotheraCaptainTinchebray,takeninJune1944 atSaint-Marcelle.Thosewereexceptionstoaharshgenerality,recognisedalikebyoccupiers, ResistersandtheirLondonsponsors.Thebroadtruthaboutspiesofallnationalitieswhofellinto enemyhandswasthattheywerekeptaliveaslongastheycouldserveapurpose,andshotwhentheir usefulnessexpired.Theemotiveword‘murdered’isoftenusedbypost-warwriterswhenmentioning SOEagents,andespeciallywomen,killedbytheGermans.Intruth,allofthemknewthatiftaken deathwouldalmostcertainlybetheirfate,legitimisedbythelawsofwar.Everycapturedagentwho wantedtolivestruggledtodecidehowmuchheorshemightrevealwithoutbecomingatraitor,and somemisjudgedtheanswer. GiskeseventuallyoperatedfourteenBritishwirelesssetsinhisEnglandspiel,whichcontinuedfor morethantwoyears,withsuccessiveconsignmentsofarmsandexplosives,togetherwithsaboteurs andwireless-operators,parachuteddirectlyintoGermancustody.Fifty-onemenfromSOE,nine fromMI6andonewomanfromMI9wereeventuallytaken,ofwhomallbutahandfulwereshot. WhenfivemadeanescapeinAugust1943andsentamessagetoLondonwarningofthedisaster,all unknowingtheyentrustedittoaV-Mann,andthusitwasneverforwarded.Whiletwooftheescapers wereontheirwaytoBritaintheAbwehrsignalledtoSOEononeofitsownsets,reportingthemento beunderGestapocontrol,withtheresultthatwhentheyarrivedtheywereconfinedforsomeweeksin Brixtonprison.ItwasGiskeshimselfwhodecidedthathehadexhaustedthepossibilitiesofhis Operation‘NorthPole’,andonAllFools’Day1944sentafinalmockingsignaltoSOE: ‘WHENEVERYOUWILLCOMETOPAYAVISITTOTHECONTINENTYOUMAYBE ASSUREDTHATYOUWILLBERECEIVEDWITHTHESAMECAREANDRESULTASALL THOSEYOUSENTUSBEFORESTOPSOLONG.’BeyondtheMI6andSOEagentswhowerelost, hundredsoflocalResistanceworkersperishedasaresultofthegrossmisconductofSOE’s NetherlandssectionbyMajorCharlesBlizardandMajorSeymourBingham.HughTrevor-Roper wroteon19June1944,acknowledgingthatforallhisdisdainforGermanintelligence-gathering,its officersdisplayedformidableeffectivenessincounteringResistance:‘WhatevertheRSHA’s deficienciesintheevaluationofintelligence,itscompetenceincounter-espionagecannotbe questioned.’ ThosewhomocktheGermansforhavingswallowedforsolongtheproductionsoftheBritish DoubleCrosssystemshouldtakeheedofthegullibilityofSOEandMI6intheirDutchoperations.All thatwasdifferentwasthatwhiletheintelligencetransmittedbytheAbwehrdoubleagentsunder BritishcontroladdressedissuesofhighstrategicimportancetoGermany,theDutchconnectionhad onlylocalsignificancefortheAlliedwareffort.Thescandal–forsuchitwas–soenragedthe NetherlandsgovernmentthatforatimeafterthewartheybelievedMajorBinghamtohavebeena double,servingtheNazis.Intruthhewasmerelyincompetent,buthewiselyemigratedtoAustralia,to startanewlifeinacontinentwherehisshamewasunknown.SOEnarrowlysurvivedWhitehall demandsthatitshouldbewoundupafterthefiascoinHollandwasrevealed,becauseChurchill rejectedanywholesalereorganisationofthesecretservicesuntilthewarended. Ananonymouspost-warcritic,obviouslyfamiliarwiththesecretworldandperhapshimselfa veteranoftherivalMI6,wrotethatmanyofSOE’sseniorpersonnel‘displayedanenthusiasmquite unrestrainedbyexperience,somehad[communist]politicalbackgroundswhichdeservedarather closerscrutinythantheyevergot,andafewcouldonlycharitablybedescribedasnutcases’.YetBill Bentinck,whoknewallthesecretservices’topmenintimately,inhisoldageofferedwarmpraisefor SOE,assertingthatithad‘goodpeople,verygoodpeople’.IfColinGubbinswasnotbrilliant,hewas acapableorganisersupportedbysomeableciviliansinuniform.BentinckemphasisedMI6’s weakness,bycontrast:‘Therewerealotofoldboys,peoplewho’dbeentherefromWorldWarIand hadbeenhangingon…Theyfanciedthemselvesasspy-masters.’NigelClive,himselfanMI6field agent,said‘SOEwasunquestionablythebest.’ Bothatthetimeandsince,someextravagantclaimshavebeenmadeabouttheabilityofResistance movementstoinfluencethemaincourseofthewar.R.HarrisSmith,anadmiringchroniclerofthe AmericanOfficeofStrategicServices,wrote:‘Partisanwarfarewasaviablealternativetofrontal assault,butSOEandOSSofficerssenttoestablishlinkswiththeResistancewerehamperedbyantipartisanprejudiceatAlliedheadquarters.’BritishandAmericanseniorsoldierswereindeedsceptical abouttheusefulnessofguerrillas,buttherewereexcellentreasonsfortheircaution.Partisansmadea marginalcontributiontothewareffortinseveraltheatres,buteveninYugoslaviaandRussiathey couldnotprovideasubstituteforthemightandmassofregulararmies.Resistanceinmanysocieties, especiallywithintheBalkans,hadmuchmoreinfluenceonpost-wareventsthanonthedefeatofthe Axis. From1943onwards,YugoslaviabecamethefocusforSOE’smostambitiousoperationsinsupport ofTito’spartisanarmy,whichreceivedvastlymoreweaponsthananyothernationalguerrillaforce; butFranceremainedBakerStreet’smostcelebratedtheatre.Itprovedrelativelyeasytoinsertagents bylightaircraftinthenorth,andbyparachutefurtherafield.Between1941and1944theRAFflew 320Lysandersorties,ofwhich210weresuccessful,landing440passengersandevacuating630,ata costofonlysixpilotskilled.Inthecountryside,manyBritishagentsandwireless-operatorssurvived atlibertyforlongperiods.ButinFrenchcities,inasocietyruledbycollaboratorsandriddledwith informers,therateofattritionwashorrific.On5June1943,SirDavidPetrie,chiefofMI5,notedina generalbroadsidetoMenziesthatbothMI6andSOEhad‘formonthspastbeensufferingserious lossesofagentsonthecontinent’becauseofGermanpenetration–andthatwasbeforetheDutch disasterwasrevealed. AmajorityofallAlliedagentscapturedbytheGermansinEuropewerevictimsofbetrayal.Oluf Reed-OlsenwroteofhisexperienceasaBritishspyinNorway:‘Onewasmostafraidofone’sown people;Ithinkallagents,saboteursandother“visitors”inNorwaywillagreethiswasso.Andthere weremanywhostoodaside,fromhateandfearofRussia,wheneventhesmallestcontributiontothe causewasaskedofthem,becausetheyconsideredtheAlliedcausetobetoomuchaffectedby Communism.’Olsen’sstricturesappliedequallyinFrance,whereafewBritishtraitorsalsodid terribleharm.Theescape-lineleader‘PatO’Leary’–CaptainAlbertGuerisseoftheBelgianarmy– usedasoneofhishelpersinthenorthduringthewinterof1941amanwhocalledhimselfCaptain HaroldCole,supposedlyanevaderleftbehindaftertheBEF’s1940evacuation.MI9–thesecret escapers’branchoftheWarOffice–foundnoofficerofthatnameontheBritishArmy’sbooks,but insteadaSergeantHaroldColewhohaddesertedfromhisunit,takingwithhimitsmessfunds. GuerissewasalreadysuspiciousthatColewassquanderinghisLine’scashonextravagantliving. Afteratensemeeting,hedispatchedthemantoLilleindisgrace. WithinafewdaysofhisarrivalinthecityinDecember1941,ColehadassistedtheGermansto arrestoneoftheLine’smostdevotedhelpers,theAbbéCarpentier,whohadbeenprintingdocuments forescapersonaprivatepress.Longafterwards,itwasdiscoveredthattheAbwehrhadbeenusing theEnglishmanformonths,undervariousaliases.AnorderwentouttoResisterstoshoothimon sight.InMay1942,however,ColewasarrestedbyVichypoliceintheunoccupiedzoneofFranceand givenalongprisonsentence,whichremovedhimfromResistanceview.Hereappearedonlyin1945, whenarrestedintheAmericanZoneofGermany,againmasqueradingasaBritishcaptain.He escapedfromdetentionandfledtoParis,wherehewaseventuallykilledinashoot-outwiththe police.MI9consideredhimresponsibleforfiftydeathsofmembersofthe‘Pat’Lineandtheir connections. FormuchofthewarafundamentaldivisionpersistedbetweentheBritishandFreeFrenchvisionsof Resistance.Churchillwaseagertostimulateandhastenarmedrevolt,toassisttheAlliedarmiesin achievingthedefeatofNazism.Gen.CharlesdeGaulle,bycontrast,cherishedapoliticalconcept– salvationofthesoulofFrancefromthesloughofhumiliationintowhichithadbeenplungedby surrenderin1940.HedefinedResistanceas‘anationalexpression’.FreeFrenchintelligence,which dependedonSOEforoperationalfacilities,wasdirectedfromLondonbyAndréDewavrin,‘Colonel Passy’,anengineerofficerbornin1911,agraduateoftheParisÉcolePolytechniqueandaformer instructoratSaint-Cyrmilitaryacademy.Dewavrin’sclevernesswasneverindoubt,norhis considerablepersonalpresence–tall,withthinningfairhairandadeceptivelysoftvoice.Heproveda skilledpoliticalinfighter,aswasindispensableinthesnakepitofLondonexilepolitics.He customarilyworecivilianclothes,andSOEofficersnotedthatwhenheappearedinuniform,itwasa sureweatherwarningthattherewastobearowwithsomebody.Hisdepartment,theBureauCentral deRenseignementsetd’Actionmilitaire,orBCRA,washousedat3StJames’sSquare,justacrossPall MallfromdeGaulle’smainheadquartersinCarltonGardens.Dewavrinrecruitedsomeremarkable personalities,prominentamongwhomwas‘Rémy’,GilbertRenault,whowasoriginally commissionedtoorganiseanescapelinethroughSpain,withtheslendercredentialsthathehadonce directedamovieaboutChristopherColumbus.Hisorganisation,theConfrérieNotre-Dame,became justlycelebrated,respectenhancedbyitscontributiontotheBrunevalcoup. Forthemostpart,however,deGaulleandDewavrinviewedtheiragentsinthefieldmoreas emissariesof‘their ’FrancethanasinstrumentsofAlliedvictory.FreeFrenchprestigeslumpedwhen thefirstBCRAmandispatchedintothefield,latein1940,reachedhisdroppingzoneinanRAF aircraft,butthenrefusedtojumpandspenttherestofthewarasastaffofficerinCarltonGardens.In thesummerof1941theBCRAcontrolledjusttwowirelessesinoccupiedFrance,oneofwhichwas shutdowninAugust.SOEappropriatedthemostpromisingrecruitsforsecretserviceamongthe refugeeswhoarrivedinBritainfromFrance,toreceiveprotractedinterrogationandscreeningatthe QueenVictoriaPatrioticSchoolinWandsworth,‘atowerofBabel’.Moreover,deGaulle’spolitical designforahighlycentralisednationalmovementrenderedtheBCRA’snetworksespecially vulnerabletoGermanpenetration. ThegeneralprofessedtobeinsultedbytheunwillingnessoftheBritishtoconfidetheirsecretsto hispeople–whowererigorouslyexcludedfromtheUltraloop.MI6describedrelationswiththeFree Frenchas‘liketryingtoliveamicablywithajealous,touchyanddomineeringwife’.British codebreakingrevealed–forinstance–deGaulle’smenconductingsecrettalkswiththeChinese aboutsecuringtheirassistancetoregainIndochina.Asumof£5,000hadtobepaidfromBritish secretfundsinMay1944tosilenceaFrenchmannamedDufours,whobroughtalegalactionagainst theLondonGaulliststosecureredressforhisownunlawfulimprisonmentandtorturebythem. CarltonGardenswasindifferenttowhattheBritishregardedasascandal.Itschiefstooktheviewthat theyhadtherighttotreattheirownnationalshowevertheysawfit,evenintheheartofLondon. TheBCRAinheritedfromtheFrencharmyarecklessattitudetosignalsecurity,usingcodeswhich theGermansbrokeevenafterMI6warnedCarltonGardensoftheirvulnerability.TheWehrmachthad capturedatrainloadofFrenchintelligencedocumentsduringtheBlitzkriegwhichtooklackadaisical Abwehranalyststwoyearstoworkthrough.In1942theydiscoveredthatamongthishaulwasalistof allFrenchsourcesinGermany,togetherwiththesumsofmoneypaidtothem.Byfarthelargest recipientwasknownas‘Asché’,orsimply‘He’,whomtheGermansbelatedlyidentifiedasHansThiloSchmidt,theAllies’pre-warinformantaboutEnigma,whowasarrestedinApril1943and perishedinSeptember,thoughitisuncertainwhetherhewasexecutedorcommittedsuicide. Thatspring,AndréDewavrinmadeapersonaltourofFrance,toexploreforhimselfoccupation conditions.Thiswascertainlycourageous,and‘Passy’returnedsafely,butitrepresentedagrotesque riskwhenhewasprivytoallhisorganisation’ssecretsandcontacts.Flamboyancewasimmensely dangerousinsecretagents.DeGaulleandChurchillwerealikeattractedtosuchResistersas Emmanueld’AstierdelaVigerie,achildofprivilegewhobecameoneofthegeneral’smost prominentsupporters.DelaVigerie,however,wasconsideredbymanyofthosewhomethimtobe anunstablefantasist.OnatourofAmericaheoncegaveapressconferencewithasackoverhishead, supposedlytomaskhisidentity,whichwaswell-knownfromBerlintoWashington,DC.Atameeting attheForeignOffice,‘C’andSOE’schiefexpressedtheirsharedview‘thattheleadersoftheFrench Resistancemovements,includingM.Emmanueld’Astierhimself,werenotnearlysointerestedin fightingtheGermansasinbuildingupanorganisationwhichwouldseizepowerwhentheGermans weredrivenout’.Therewastruthinthis.MI6andSOEassembledmostoftheimportanthumintto comeoutofFrance,especiallyinadvanceofD-Day.Dewavrinwasembarrassedtodiscoverthat HenriFrenay,leaderofthe‘Combat’Resistancegroup,wassellingintelligenceforhandsomesums ofcashtoAllenDullesofOSS,ratherthandonatingittotheFreeFrenchcause. BritishapprehensionabouttheelaborateGaullistpoliticalstructureinsideFrance,andits vulnerabilitytoinformers,wasvindicatedinthespringandsummerof1943,whentheGestapo conductedmassarrests.VictimsincludedJeanMoulin,principalstandard-bearerofthe‘London French’,whowastorturedandexecuted,andGen.CharlesdeLestraint,asixty-three-year-old nominatedbydeGaulleasleaderofhisso-calledArméeSecrète.Lestraintpossessednoaptitudefor secretwar,norindeedmuchmeritsavehisoppositiontoFrance’sVichyrulers.Hisarreston6June 1943wasnolosstotheAlliedwareffort.ThoughpropagandamadedeGaulleagiantinhiscountry bythetimeofD-Day,cynicsassertedthattheBCRAcreatedmoremartyrsthanusefulResisters. Itwashardforcitizensofdemocraciestoadapttotheirondisciplinesofintelligencework–lifein asecretuniverseinwhichtrustinone’sfellowmanorwomanwasadangerousself-indulgence.It meantmuchtopeoplewhonursedtheshameofdefeatandoccupationtoconfideinothersaboutthe worktheyweredoingforthecauseoffreedom,sothattheymightwalkalittletallerintheirstreets, butthiswasmortallyperilous.OlufReed-Olsenavowedthehabitualindiscretionofhisownpeople: ‘itwasnotexclusivelyaNorwegianweakness…andinourcasethereasonmayhavebeenthatthere hadbeennowarinourcountryforabout125years.Loquacitywasourgreatdifficulty…Itwashard togetfellow-workerswhocouldresistthetemptationtotelltheirfriendsandrelationswhattheywere doing.’AnoverwhelmingmajorityofdedicatedResistersweredrawnfromthehumblersectionsof society.TheofficialhistoriansofMI9wrote:‘Escapersandevadersfoundalmostuniformly…every sortofreadinesstohelpthemamongthepoorersortsofpeopleandeverysortofreserveamong mostoftherich.’Thesamewastrueofallbranchesofsecretactivity:itmayconfidentlybesaidthat thosewithmostmateriallytolosedidleasttoopposetheGermanoccupiers,whilethosewithleast propertydidmost. GeorgeHiller,whoservedasanSOEagentinruralFrancein1943–44,latergaveathoughtfuland movingaccountofhisexperiences.Therecouldbenocloserbond,hesaid,thanthatbetweenthe hiderandthehiddeninsuchcircumstancesasthoseinwhichhefoundhimselfintheLot:he,aBritish agent,dailyplacedhislifeinthehandsoflocalFrenchmenandtheirfamilies–almostinvariably littlepeople,peasantsorteachersortradesunionists–whomhehadnevermetbefore,fromwhomin peacetimehewouldhavebeenseparatedbyanunbridgeablesocialandculturaldivide.They, meanwhile,harbouredhimintheknowledgethatiftheirhospitalitywaseverrevealed,conceivably byhimselfasaprisonerundertorture,theirlivesandallthattheyownedwouldbeforfeit. Civilianbystanderswhosuddenlychancedonmanifestationsofsecretoperationswerechiefly concernedtosavethemselvesfrombeingsweptawayintherecriminationsorreprisalsofthe occupiers.OnedayReed-OlsenfoundhimselftravellingonaNorwegiantrainwhichwassubjectedto asurprisesearch.Hethrewopenawindowandhurledoutintothecountrysidethreepassports,a revolverandwhirlingwadsofcash,whilenearbypassengerswatchedinterror,aswelltheymight. JamesLangleyofMI9suggestedafterthewarthatoneResistanceworkerforfeitedhisorherlifefor everyAlliedsoldierorairmanwhousedasecretescapeline.Whenthefamous‘Comet’networkwas eventuallypenetratedandmanyofitsmemberslayimprisonedandawaitingdeath,Langleydelivered anemotionalpleatoMI6totrytosavesomeofthem.ClaudeDanseyrespondedwithaharshness worthyofMoscowCentre:‘Yourtrouble,Jimmy,isthatyouloveyouragents.’ TheMediterraneanbecametheforemosthappyhuntinggroundofSOE,sceneofsomeofits agents’mostdramaticexploits.CriticsthoughtthatthewrongtonewassetbyGreyPillars,Baker Street’sCairoheadquarters,whichseemedtoocomfortableforthehubofamilitaryoperation.In 1941–42thebuilding’satmospherewaspoisonedbyfeudsandmutualsuspicions:onecoloneltriedto getalisteningdevicefittedtohisphone,sothathisconversationswithcolleaguescouldberecorded. In1943therewasamajorpurgeoftheorganisation,butSOECaironeverbecameahappyship,not leastbecauseoftensionsbetweencommunistsympathisersandindeedpromotersamongitsBritish officers,andcolleaguesofmoreconservativemien. TherewaslastingbitternessaboutthemannerinwhichSOEtransferreditssupportfromthe royalistGen.MihailovićtothecommunistTitoinYugoslavia,causingtheincidentaldeathsofseveral Britishagents.Personalitiespowerfullyinfluencedthisoutcome:themenoperatingwithMihailović werelacklustrereporters,whilethedispatchesofChurchill’sformerhistoricalresearcherMajor WilliamDeakin,andlaterofToryMPCol.FitzroyMaclean,weredraftedinscintillatingand inspirationalterms,temperedbyamonumentalnaïvetéaboutTito’scharacter,politicalobjectivesand dallianceswiththeGermans.DeakinandMacleanbecametwoofthemostinfluentialsecretagentsof thewar;theirreportsweredecisiveinpersuadingtheprimeministertothrowBritishsupport, manifestedinhugedeliveriesofarmsandequipment,behindthecommunistcause. From1943,asresourcesbecamefreelyavailable,SOECairoevolvedintoamassiveoperation.By OctoberitwashandlingeightyfieldmissionsintheBalkans,withairtransportmovementsorganised byanex-NottinghamTramwaysmanagernamedWigginton,whogainedareputationforformidable efficiency.Meanwhile‘Skipper ’PooleranthesuperblynamedLevantineFishingPatrol,transporting suppliestoGreece.FactionalstrifewasanoccupationalhazardofliaisonwithResistancegroupsin everytargetnation.WhenNigelCliveofMI6wasparachutedintoGreeceinDecember1943,hespent hisfirsthouronthegroundlisteningtoalitanyofcomplaintsfromSOE’sFredWrightaboutthe frustrationofbeingunabletodomuchsabotage,because‘allhisenergieshadbeenconcentratedon thepoliticalassignmentoftryingtopreventanextensionofthecivilwarbetweenEDESandELAS’. Clivewrote:‘Politicalratherthantechnicalorstandardmilitaryqualificationswerewhatwouldbe requiredofthosewho[organised]theGreekresistance.’ AproblembesettingSOEuntilthe1944eveofD-DayinFrancewasthatitlackedaclear, overarchingstrategicdirective,settingouttheultimatepurposeofstimulatingResistance.‘SetEurope ablaze’didnotamounttoacoherentprogramme.WasBakerStreetseekingtocreateguerrillaarmies toconductpitchedbattleswiththeGermans?Togatherintelligence?TosabotagetheAxiswareffort? ColinGubbinswroteaboutthedifficulty‘ofcarryingouttwobroadtaskssimultaneously,whichwere themselveshardlycompatible,thatisaction,daybydayandweekafterweek,inspecificattacks againstselectedtargetsinoccupiedcountries,andatthesametimethecreationofsecretarmies, equipped,organisedandtrained,readytocomeintoactionasorderedwheninvasionshouldcome. EveryattackcarriedoutnaturallyalertedtheGestapo.’Churchill’sromanticvisionneverattractedhis ownservicechiefsofstaff,whodislikedandevendeploredthepiratesofSOE.Theywereright,ina narrowlymilitarysense,thattheContinentwouldnothavebeenfreedfromNazityrannyasingleday laterhadResistanceneverexisted.Butposteritymaychoosetoseeitssponsorshipasasignificant elementinChurchill’sgeniusasawarleader,becauseheunderstooditsimmensemoralvalue. Asthetideofthewarturned,from1943onwards,inSweet-Escott’swords‘thereweremanymore menandwomenpreparedtotakerisksintheAlliedcausethantherehadbeenayearbefore’.Bythe middleof1944,SOE’soperationsinWesternEuropeweresupportedbyathousandairsortiesa month,flownbyfivesquadronsofRAFbombers.During1944–45,Germaninterceptorsidentified hundredsofAlliedagent-orpartisan-operatedwirelesstransmittersoperatinginterritoriestheNazis werestillstrivingtocontrol,orwheretheyhadimportantinterests.TheydetectedtwentyinPoland, sixinCzechoslovakia,seventeeninNorway,fourinDenmark,twenty-twoinHolland,twenty-seven inBelgium,thirty-fiveinParis,twentyinwesternFrance,sixty-oneinsouthernFrance,fifteenin NormandyandBrittany,teninSpain,fourinSwitzerland,twenty-fiveinnorthernItaly,eightin southernItaly,thirtyinYugoslavia–and140inRussia.TheAbwehr ’sdirection-findersprompted thirtyarrestsin1941,ninetyin1942,160in1943and130in1944;thesefiguresillustratednotso muchGermanvigilanceastheever-increasingenergyofResistance. Asthestorydrewtoanend,withtheprogressive1944–45liberationofGerman-occupied societies,therewasfiercedebateaboutwhethertheoutcomeofSOE’sactivitiesjustifiedtheircost. BakerStreetcouldpointtosuchnotableachievementsastheFebruary1943sabotageoftheRjukan heavy-waterplantinNorway,andthesinkingayearlateroftheferrycarryingtoGermanyrailtanker wagonsladenwith15,000litresofpreciousproductfromtheplant.ThreeNorwegianagents,Knut Haulkelid,KnutLier-HansenandRolfSorlie,boardedtheferrydisguisedasgreasers,andlaid delayed-actionchargeswhichexploded,sinkingthevessel,inthemidstofLakeTinnjo.Onlyafterthe wardiditbecomeknownthatNaziatomicresearchhadmadefartoolittleprogressforthe consignmenttocontributeanythingtotheirwareffort;butthisdidnotnegateeitherthewisdomof launchingthemission,orthemarvellouscourageandingenuityoftheagentswhocarrieditout.In France,beforeandafterD-Day,ResistancegroupslaunchedwidespreadattacksontheGermanlines ofcommunicationwhich,thoughmuchlessstrategicallyinfluentialthanAlliedbombing,causedthe occupiersintenseannoyance. Scepticspersisted,especiallyintheBalkans,wherecommunistinfluencewasstrongest,most ruthlessandpernicious.DavidWallace,anSOEofficerkilledinactionon19August1944,reported savagelytoCairoshortlybeforehisdeath:‘OureffortinGreece,inmenandmoney,hasnotonly beenoutofallproportiontotheresultswehaveachievedagainsttheGermans,butalsotothevalue oftheGreekpeople,whoarenotcapableofbeingsavedfromthemselves,norarethemselvesworth it.ThisisalsotheunanimousopinionofallBritishliaisonofficers,whohavebeenlonginthis country.’WallacewasquitewrongtosuggestthathiscynicalassessmentwassharedbyallhisBritish comradesinGreece,orelsewhereinWesternEurope.NigelClivedescribedanexuberantpartyinthe communityinwhichheserved,heldtocelebratethe1944GermanwithdrawalfromGreece.Heused thesortofemotionallanguageoftenadoptedbyBritishandAmericanofficerswhosharedsecretlife inoccupiedlands:‘Ienjoyedoneofthoseraremomentsofpride,thatIhadlived,worked,struggled andfoughtwiththekindofpeoplewhohadsharedthisevening’scelebration.Tohavegonesome waytobeingacceptedasoneofthemseemedtohavemadethewholeoftheadventureworthwhile… Beforethesepeople,whosetitleswerenotintheirmilitaryranksbutintheirChristiannames,Icould onlybowmyhead.Theyhadnogreatclaimsonlife.Theywerenotdreamingofmarblehallsandthe gleamingtinselofvictory.Theirsimplevillageliveshadbeendisruptedbyforeigninvasionsand theirconsequences.Inresponsetheyhadgivenallthatwasbestwithinthem:theircourageand instinctiveguile,theirrefusaltosubmit,theirintelligentandcriticalreserveaboutthemotiveofsome oftheirleaders…TherewasanunquestionedacceptanceofthevalueoftheBritishconnection.’ Thiswasaromanticperception.Therecordshowsthatinmanycountriestheweaponsprovidedto ResistancebytheAllieswereusedmoreenergeticallytopromotefactionalinterests–mostly communist–followingliberation,thantofighttheAxisduringtheoccupation.AnOSSmajor droppedintonorth-westItalyreportedthatthepartisanswere‘20percentforLiberationand80per centforRussia.WesoonfoundthattheywereburyingtheGermanarmstheyhadcaptured.’Since 1945,manyfancifulaccountshavebeenpublished,whichexaggeratethematerialdamageinflictedon AxisforcesbyAlliedagentsandResistance,especiallyinthewakeofD-Day.Itissalutarytocompare thesewithGermanwardiaries,whichshowhowrelativelysmallwerethecasualtiesimposedby guerrillas:forinstance,the2ndSSPanzerDivision,whichtravelledfromMontaubantoNormandyin June1944,sheddingriversofinnocentbloodonitsway,lostjustthirty-fivekilledoutof15,000men. Sabotageandlocalattacksoftenrequiredacceptanceofhigherrisksandlossesthantargetsmerited innarrowlymilitaryterms.Col.DickBarry,Gubbins’sveryablechiefofstaffatBakerStreet,said longafterwardsaboutitswartimecontribution:‘Itwasonlyjustworthit.’YetSOE’soperationswere importantthen,andseemjustifiednow,bytheirmoralimpactandcontributiontofomenting insecurity,tension,sometimesmurderoushysteriaamongGermanoccupyingforces.Itwaschiefly thankstotheaidprovidedtolocaloppositionmovementsbySOEandOSSthatalegendofpopular insurrectionwascreated,whichcontributedimmenselytorevivingtheself-respectofEurope’s occupiedsocietiesafter1945.NevercouldenemiesofdemocracyclaimthatBritainandtheUnited Stateshadabandonedtheoccupiednationstotheirfate. AcrossEurope–theAsianstorywillbediscussedbelow–themenandwomenwhoservedas SOE’sfieldagentsofferedasacrificetothecauseoffreedomwhichbecameevidenttothepeopleof mostoccupiedsocietiesafterthewar,eveniftheyknewnothingofitduringtheiryearsoftrial. Moreovernoneofthefollies,failuresandembarrassmentsdescribedaboveshouldbeallowedto maskthetoweringhistoricalrealitythatsomehundredsofthousandsoffineandbravepeopleinthe occupiedcountriesriskedeverythinginthecauseofResistance.OnlySOE’ssupport–withmoney, arms,wirelesses–empoweredthemtomakethatchoice.Toomuchpost-warattentionandadmiration hasfocuseduponthedeedsoftheforeigners,SOE’sBritishagents,whohazardedonlytheirown younglivesinthecauseofagreatandindisputablyromanticadventure;toolittleuponthepeoplesof Europe,ofallagesandbothsexes,whojoinedoneofhundredsofResistancenetworks.Their contributionshouldbejudgedmuchmorebythemagnitudeoftheirstakesandtheirsacrificesthanby themilitaryachievements,orlackofthem.ForallSOE’sextravagancesandfollies,itbecamethe mosteffectiveBritishsecretoperationsorganisationofthewar,andjustifiedtheChurchillianleapof imaginationthatinspireditscreation. 11 Hoover’sG-Men,Donovan’sWildMen 1 A D V ENTUR ER S ‘WildBill’Donovan’snew-bornforeignintelligenceservice,theOfficeofStrategicServices, encounteredmostofthesamedifficulties,dramasandcriticismsasSOE,andmoreofthem.Oneday earlyin1945,deepineasternFranceaUSArmydivisionalstaffofficerheldforthtocolleaguesin frontofoneofDonovan’smen:‘Gentlemen,IamgoingtotellyouabouttheOSS…themost fantasticdamnedorganizationinallourarmedforces.Itspeopledoincrediblethings.Theyseduce Germanspies,theyparachuteintoSicilyonedayandtwodayslaterthey’redancingontheStRegis roof.Theydynamiteaqueducts,urinateinLuftwaffegastanks,andplaygameswithIGFarbenand Krupp,but’–throwinguphishands–‘90percentofthishasnotagoddamnedthingtodowiththe war.’ Thestaffofficer ’srantmayhavebeeninfluencedbythefactthatthevisitorwhoprovokeditwasa Hollywoodfilmstar,thinlydisguisedasoneofDonovan’smen.Butitwastheactorwhorecordedthe story,andhimselfhalf-acceptedthecynicalviewofOSSadoptedbymanyuniformedsoldiers:theUS WarDepartmentinWashingtonrefusedtoopenitsfilestoDonovan’speople,orindeedtoinclude himontheUltradistributionlist.Maj.Gen.GeorgeV.Strong,GeorgeMarshall’sintelligencechief, regardedDonovan’sactivitieswithunremittingscorn,asdidhis1944successor,ClaytonBissell.OSS wasexuberant,ill-disciplined,unfocusedandwildlyextravagant,inkeepingwiththepersonalityofits founder.Acoolerfiguremighthavebuiltamoremeasuredservice.ButtheUnitedStatesfacedan extraordinarychallenge,tocreatefromastandingstartinthemidstofaworldwaranorganisation withglobalresponsibilitiesforintelligence,sabotageandguerrillaoperations,arangeofmissions thateveryotherbelligerentusedseveralservicestofulfil. AnSOEmanvisitingWashingtonin1942wasenchantedtoobserveasigninasidestreetnearthe WhiteHouse:‘NOPARKING:U.S.SECRETSERVICEONLY’.America’snot-very-‘secretservice’ officerswereresponsibleonlyforguardingthepresidentandsuppressingforgeryofthedollar. OSS’sfolliesandfailuresweremanyandvarious,butlittleworsethanthoseofitsAlliedandAxis counterparts.Allthatwasdifferentwasthatwhereothernationsafterwardssoughttoburytheir excessesandfailures,theAmericanscharacteristicallyavowedthem.Moreover,OSScouldclaimto havecreatedthemostimpressiveresearchandanalysisarmofanyintelligenceserviceintheworld. DuringthemonthsbeforeandafterPearlHarbor,theBritishwerefearfulthatDonovan’sascentto powerwouldbefrustratedbyanglophobes,becausethecolonelwassoconspicuouslyenthusiastic aboutChurchill’speople.ManyofhisearlystruggleswerenotagainsttheGermans,butagainstJ. EdgarHooveroftheFederalBureauofInvestigation.Incommonwiththesecurityservicesofevery othernation,theFBIexpandeddramaticallyduringthewaryears,its1941strengthof2,280risingby 1945to15,000,including5,000specialagents–the‘G-men’,astabloidslangdubbedthem.Bya directiveof23December1941,theWhiteHouseagreedthattheFBIshouldextenditsremittocover counter-intelligenceactivitiesthroughouttheAmericas.ThisempoweredHoovertocreateanew corporation–ImportersandExportersServices,withquartersinNewYork’sRockefellerCenter–as acoverforitsagentsoverseas.Later,theBureaupersuadedbonafidecompaniestodotheirpatriotic dutybyprovidingcredentialsforitsmen–Reader ’sDigest,TwentiethCentury-Fox,Paramount, Procter&Gamble,H.J.Heinz.SpecialAgentRichardAuerbach,whotravelledtoBogotáasa supposedrepresentativeofWallStreet’sMerrillLynch,claimedtohavesold$100millionworthof stocksandbondsdownthere. Hooverhurriedtopre-emptDonovanbydeployinghisownmeninSouthAmerica,butthe logisticaldifficultiesofwartimeforeigntravelwereimmense,evenforUSsecretservants,andfar fromanycombatzone.WhenSpecialAgentRichardCrowwasassignedtoLaPaz,hestartedoutby plane,thenbecamestrandedinPanamafortendaysbeforecatchingaflighttoColombia,wherehe kickedhisheelsforafurtherweekbeforeflyingtoLima.Afterfivedaysthere,heabandonedhopeof gettinganotherplaneseatandinsteadrentedacartosouthernPerubeforecatchingatrainrideto LakeTiticaca.Hecrossedthewaterinanativeboat,thengotatraintotheBoliviancapital.Whathe didwhenhegotthereisunrecorded,andwasperhapslessinteresting. WhiletheFBIcouldclaimsuccessinprotectingtheUnitedStatesfromAxisintelligence–a relativelyeasytask,giventheclumsinessofAbwehrandJapaneseattemptsatpenetration–itschief quarrelledwitheverybranchofthearmedforcesbecauseofhisrefusaltocollaborate,toshare informationorinformantsthatfellintohisclutches.TheOfficeofNavalIntelligencewasespecially exasperatedbyHoover ’sintransigence.On13August1942oneofitsofficers,CommanderW.S. Hogg,launchedafierceattackontheBureau’s‘inabilitytofitintoaplaceinanycoordinatedmilitary activity.[The]FBIisacivilianorganisationwithabackgroundofpeace.Ithasbeenbuiltonits publicity,itsfavourwiththepublicandCongressanditsreputationasaprotectorofthepeople.Itis ambitious,properlysoinpeacetime,perhaps,butquestionablysointimeofwar…Ex-agentsofFBI havesaidthateveryAgentoweshisallegiancefirsttoHooverandsecondtotheUnitedStates.’ AcharacteristicepisodetookplacewhenanescapedGermanairman,PeterKrug,wasarrestedin SanAntonio:armedforcesintelligencebrancheswerenotinformeduntilaftertheFBIhadhelda triumphantpressconference.MeanwhileLauranceSaffordofOp-20-Ghadamajorrowwiththe BureauoverownershipofsomeGermandiplomaticcodesthatFBIagentsseizedinSanFrancisco. HooverlaunchedabitteroffensiveagainsttheinfantOSS’searlyventuresinSouthAmerica, denouncingDonovan’salleged‘interferencewiththeBureau’sresponsibilityforhandlingand controllingoperationsofenemyespionageagentsintheWesternHemisphere’.Thedirectorwaseven morehostiletoChurchill’snationanditsintelligenceservices.TheFBI’sinternalhistorycomplains: ‘TheBritishMI6displayeditsuncooperativeattitudetosuchadegreethatonFeb4,1944,theBureau founditnecessarytomakeavigorousprotesttotheBritishSecurityrepresentativeinNewYorkand totheLondonheadquarters.’Foritsownpart,MI6abandonedearlyandunsuccessfuleffortstowork withtheFBI’smenonthegroundinSouthAmerica,andcollaboratedinsteadwiththeUSArmy’sG-2 department. Allintelligenceservicesseektopromotefactionalinterestsandinflatetheirownachievements,but thewartimeFBIcarriedthispracticetomaniclengths.TheBritishwereexasperatedthatHoover preferredtosnatchheadlinecreditforhigh-profilecaptures,ratherthanprivilytrackorturnenemy spies.Theywereespeciallyannoyedwhentheirownprizedoubleagent,‘Garbo’,spentsometimein theUSin1941–42,andtheFBImismanagedhimsogrosslythathewasalmostblown.Moreoverthe Bureauhadthechutzpahtoboastthatitwasitselfresponsibleforthecreationandmanagementofthe DoubleCrosssystemwhichhelpedtoconfusetheGermansaboutD-Day:theFBIEspionageSection’s quarterlysummaryof‘outstandingaccomplishments’,composedon1May1944forcirculation throughoutthehigherechelonsoftheRooseveltadministration,recorded:‘OnMarch17thefirst messagecalculatedtodeceivetheGermansastothedateoftheEuropeaninvasionbytheAllieswas sentthroughthe[FBI’s]doubleagentPatJbyradio.Thismessagewasfollowedbysimilarmessages forthesamepurpose…Theoperationofdoubleagentsduringthisquartercontinuedtoaddtothe Bureau’sknowledgeofthemodusoperandiandpersonnelemployedbytheGermanintelligence service.’Inthewinterof1944theFBIcirculatedamemorandumwhichconcludedmagisterially: ‘Considerationisbeinggiventocontinuingsomeofourdoubleagentstopenetratethe[German] undergroundaftercessationofhostilities.’Toagreaterdegreethananyotherintelligenceand securityorganisationtheFBI–or,moreexplicitly,Hooveritschieftain–chosetoviewthewaras providingatheatrefortheextensionofhisownpowerandprestige,ratherthanasamissiontodefeat theAxis. WhiletheFBIwagedasuccessfulexpansionistcampaignintheAmericas,elsewhereintheworld Donovantriumphed,andsoonpresidedoveralargeempire.BillBentinckoftheBritishJICnever waveredinhisviewthattheprimeminister ’screationofSOEasaseparateserviceandrivaltoMI6 hadbeenamistake.HeurgedDonovantokeep‘skulduggery’andintelligence-gatheringunderone roof,andsoindeedtheAmericansdid.InJune1942,byexecutiveordertheOfficeofWar InformationbecametheOfficeofStrategicServices.Itwashousedmostlyinbuildingsvacatedbythe PublicHealthService,andsooncomprisedfourbranches:SecretIntelligence(SI);SecretOperations (SO);psychologicalwarfareor‘MoraleOperations’(MO);counter-espionage(X-2). Washingtonbulgedwithpeople–70,000newarrivalsinthefirstyearafterPearlHarbor–and 5,000morefederalworkersarrivedeachmonththereafter,manybringingtheirfamilieswiththem. Thetelephonesystemstruggledtograpplewithincreaseddemand,especiallyforlong-distancecalls. Thegovernmentspent–andwasted–cashonsuchascaleastheworldhadneverseen.‘Tempos’, buildingsrushedupinacoupleofmonthstohousenewdepartments,appearedoneverygreenspace aroundthecitycentre.Paper,filingcabinetsandtypewriterswereindesperatelyshortsupply;amida nationalappealforusedmachines,radiostationsplayedajingle:‘Anidletypewriterisahelpto Hitler.’Thecapitalwastransformedoveradecadefromaquietbackwaterintoanoisy,crowded, expensivecityboastingamushroomgrowthofacronyms,eachonesignifyinganeworganisation: WPB,OPA,WMC,BEW,NWLB,ODT–andnowOSS. TheBritishweredelighted,exceptClaudeDanseyofMI6,whoexpresseddisgust.Hatingboththe UnitedStatesandSOE,hewasappalledthatthelatterwasnowtohaveanAmericancounterpart,bent onpursuingthesame‘noisypaths’,andrunbyaflamboyantofficerwho,inDansey’sview,was ‘completelysoldonpublicity’.BroadwayjudgedthatDonovanwasmoreinterestedinthethrillsand spillsofsponsoringparamilitaryoperationsinenemyterritorythaninintelligence-gathering.One keyareaofUSsecretactivitieswasring-fencedbeyondOSS’sremit:thecolonelhadnoinfluence overtheUSArmy’sandUSNavy’scodebreakers,whorepresentedbyfarthemostimportant elementsofAmerica’swartimeintelligenceeffort.Moreover,in1942,andtoDonovan’schagrin, propagandawashivedofftoElmerDavis’sOfficeofWarInformation.Hisownmenweretobe spies,saboteursandsponsorsofguerrillacampaigns. Underthestimulusofitsmanicallyenergeticfounder,OSSexpandedlikeagiantpartyballoon. DonovanpromisedFDRanorganisationbasedonmenwhowere‘calculatinglyreckless’,with ‘disciplineddaring’,and‘trainedforaggressiveaction’.ItsNewYorkfacilitystruckoneofficeras resemblingapantomimerepertorycompany:‘Everyonewasworkingupascheme.Everything shimmeredinsecrecy,anditwasararemanwhoknewwhathisfellowsweredoing.BrooksBrothers wastheunofficialcostume-makerwhileAbercrombie&Fitchfunctionedasanuptown QuartermasterCorps,supplyingairmattressesandsleepingbagsandalltheparaphernaliasodearto theheartsofsmallboysandciviliansturnedsemi-guerrillas.’WhenArthurSchlesingerjoinedthe organisationin1943,hewrotetohisparentsthatnobodyseemedtoworktoohard,thematerialwas interesting,andtherewereniceperquisitessuchasprivatescreeningsofHollywoodnewreleasesfor Donovan’sintimatecircle.Buttheyoungacademicdeploredtheremotenessfromreality,ashesawit, oftheneworganisation:‘Forallthedeathlysecrecyofmuchofthematerial,thereisanivory-tower serenityabouttheplace.’ OSSeventuallyemployedover13,000Americanstogetherwithmanymoreforeigners,and enjoyedalmostunlimitedfundingforweapons,planes,cars,officeequipment,houses.Malcolm Muggeridge,MI6’smaninLourençoMarques,complainedthatthearrivalthereofanOSS representativepromptedsoaringinflationinthelocalbribemarket.AUSofficerdispatchedtothe Mediterraneanwrote:‘ThechiefsofthevariousOSSheadquartersoverseashadaspectaculartalent forlivinginstyle.TheCairovillalookedlikeabastardversionoftheTajMahal.Thehighwall arounditwaspiercedbyatallirongate;therewerebroadverandasofinlaidtileandaprofusionof shadetreesabovevaststretchesoflawn.Aplatoonofservantsglidedinendlesscircles,thepunkahs revolvedoverheadandthroughaleafycrevasseyoucouldgazeeachdawnonapairofyoung Egyptiangirlsastheycombedeachother ’shair.’OSSsetupitsIndianheadquartersat32Ferozshah Road,inDelhi’ssmartestneighbourhood,withanimplausiblesignonthegateproclaimingittobe theresidenceof‘DrL.L.Smith,AmericanDentist’. Donovanhadnopatiencewithadministration,andlesswithaccountancy,whichenabledsomeOSS officerstostealsubstantialsumsofcash.MajorWilliamHolohan,aforty-year-oldHarvard-educated formerlawyerfortheSecurities&ExchangeCommission,wasparachutedintonorthernItalyfor OSSinSeptember1944with$16,000inoperationalfundsandanItalian-Americaninterpreter,Lt. AldoIcardi.IcardithereafterreportedhischiefkilledinaGermanambush.Afterthewar,however, anItaliancourtfoundinabsentiathatIcardiandhissergeant,aNewYorkfactoryworkerofSicilian extraction,hadpoisonedthenshotHolohan,dumpedhisbodyinalakeandseizedhispriceless dollarsforthebenefitofacommunistpartisangroup.Thetruthofthatepisoderemainsdisputed,but OSScheerfullyacknowledgedemploymentofsomebloodstainedcharacters,includingaccredited membersoftheMafia. AlthoughmostofDonovan’smenworeuniform,therewasnosalutingnordresscode.Where everyotherwartimeintelligencechiefwasacreatureofhisrespectivegovernment,hewasentirely hisownman,possessedofacheekfoundedonapersonalmandatefromthepresident.Thiswasa sourceofexasperationtotheBritish;fortherestofthewartheirintelligencechiefsweretorn betweencondescensiontowardsDonovan,whomtheyregardedasacharlatan,andgrudging acknowledgementofhiscloutinWashington.BruceLockhartwroteafterameetinginLondonin June1942:‘Thecolonelhasagedandisnotveryimpressive.AccordingtoDesmondMorton…The PresidentlikesColonelDonovan,sayshemustbehelpeddown,butthatheisnoorganiserandisa childinpoliticalmatters.’ WithintheUnitedStatesthenewserviceacquiredinstantglamour,andareputationastheplacefor anywell-connectedwarriorwhowishedtoservehiscountryonmorecongenialtermsthanlineduty couldoffer.AmericaninfantryleadershipwasasmuchweakenedaswasthatoftheBritishArmyby thediversionofofficersandNCOsto‘privatearmies’,ofwhichDonovan’swasthemost conspicuousexample.Allmannerofclever,upmarketAmericansgravitatedtoOSSwhohadcourage inplenty,butnoappetitefordisplayingitinfoxholes.FewofDonovan’srecruitshadmilitary experience;mostwere,instead,formercorporateexecutives.TheMadisonAvenueadvertising agencyJ.WalterThompsonprovidedOSS’schiefofplanning,Cairo’sexecutiveofficerand Casablanca’sblack-propagandaspecialist.ThereweremanyrichIvyLeaguers,includingbothofJ.P. Morgan’ssons;inWashingtonaDuPonthandledFrenchintelligenceactivities;AndrewMellon’sson PaulwasLondonadministrativeofficerofSpecialOperations,andhisbrother-in-lawDavidBruce becameheadofstation.OnlyRockefellerswerelacking:Nelson,whoservedasthegovernment’s CoordinatorofInter-AmericanAffairs,gotintoaturfrowwithDonovan,asaresultofwhichthetwo menwerenolongeronspeakingterms.OSSalsorecruitedmanyWhiteRussians,including‘Prince’ SergeObolensky. Thentherewerethehumblerpersonnel,manyofthemwomen,pioneerswhoseprevious experienceoftheworldoutsidetheirownstate,nevermindtheUS,couldbedescribedonapostage stamp.ThefilesrecordthousandsofclericalstaffsuchasCeciliaChapmanJustice,twenty-four,just fivefeettwoinchestall,fromGrossePointe,Michigan:shehadbeenanairlineticketagent,then spentafewmonthsasacryptanalystforAirTransportCommandbeforeshejoinedOSS,andwas postedtoIndia.Shewroteinherownsubmissionforsuitability:‘ThetrainingIhavereceivedsinceI havebeenwithOSSgivesmeconfidencethattheassignmentIamtohaveabroadwillbeoneIcan handlewithassurance.BecauseoftheknowledgeIhaveacquiredofthepoliticsofthisorganisation,I amsureIcancomplywiththem.ForthetimeIwasemployedbyATCIlivedcompletelyindependent ofmyfamily,andIfeelsurethatIshallbecompetenttotakecareofmyselfwhileoverseas.Iama ProtestantandIdonotbelongtoanyorganisationwhichadvocatestheoverthrowoftheUS Government.’ Thearchivescataloguehundredsofothersuchlittlepersonalodysseys.Posteritymaywonderwhat MarthaBelleKershawmadeofCeylon,LauraWolcottTuckermanofCairo,orThelmaStoneCarson ofLondon.WhatwasforsurewasthatAmericandiplomatshadnomoretimeforDonovan’spushy peoplethandidtheirBritishcounterpartsforSOE.TheUSambassadorinAnkaraprotestedfuriously againstdemandsthatOSSpersonnelshouldbegranteddiplomaticcover.Hisofficewroteto Washington:‘HefeelsverystronglythattheEmbassymustnotbeusedtogivecovertoOSS…He himselfbelievesthattheentireideaof“cover”forOSSisridiculous.’TheUSambassadorin ChongqinglikewiseopposedaccreditingDonovan’spersonnelunlesshewasgrantedsomeauthority overtheiractivities,whichthegeneralwouldnevercountenance. TheUSconsulinTangierresistedaplantosendOSS’sColonelHarryWanvigintoSpanish Moroccodisguisedasacivilian,pointingoutthathewasalreadyknowntotheSpanishauthoritiesas anarmyofficer,andthat‘hispresenceherewouldservenousefulpurposeandwouldfurthermorebe undesirablefromsecuritypointofview’.TherewerealmostceaselessStateDepartmentprotests againsttheballooningscaleofOSSofficesandstaffing,asastreamofitspersonnelofallagesand bothsexesdescendedoneverymajorcitywheretheAllieshadafooting.Donovanandhis subordinates,however,wavedasidethenay-sayersand–atleastuntiltheautumnof1944,whenhis influenceintheWhiteHousebegantodeclineprecipitously–gotawaywithplentymorethanmurder. EventhoseOSSfieldofficersnotrecruitedfromthesocialelitewereoftenexoticpersonalities. ProminentamongthemwasSterling‘Buzz’Hayden,whobecameoneofDonovan’sstars.Hewas bornin1916,sonofanimprovidentNewJerseynewspaper-spacesalesmanwhodiedwhenhewas nine.ExposuretoNewEnglandharboursbredintohisrovingandracketychildhoodapassionforthe seawhichprovedlifelong.Atsixteenheranawaytojoinasailingschooner,andthereafterservedon aBanksfishingtrawlerbeforeskipperinganeighty-nine-footbrigantinethroughahurricaneto Tahiti.Hefellinlovewithalotofgirls,andplentyofthemsuccumbedtohisruggedgoodlooksand venturesomespirit.HespenteverythinghehadsavedtobuyKaiserWilhelmII’soldyacht,onlyto haveitwreckedunderhiminastorm.In1939hisgodfather,aNewYorkbusinessman,said,‘Gollys, youngfeller,you’vehadquiteatimeforyourself,haven’tyou?Don’tyouthinkit’sabouttimeyou settleddownandmadesomethingofyourself?’ Inafashion,sohedid.Hissix-foot-four,220-poundfigurecaughttheeyeofaHollywoodtalent scout.In1940hestartedworkatParamountona$600-a-monthcontract,andwaspromptlycast oppositeMadeleineCarroll,theBritish-bornBirminghamUniversitygraduateandformer schoolteacherwhohadbecomethemosthighlypaidfemalestarintheworld.Theymadethemovie Virginiatogether,andfellinlove.Shewastenyearsolder,butsomebodyoncedescribedthecouple as‘thetwomostbeautifulhumanbeingsintheworld.’HaydenmetRooseveltattheWhiteHouse beforerejectingtheleadinForWhomtheBellTollstojointhewar.HehatedHollywood,andstruck upanacquaintancewithBillDonovan.InNovember1941hesailedtoEngland,completing commandoandparachutecoursestherebeforeinjuringhimselfonajumpinMarch1942and returningtoAmerica,wherehemarriedCarroll. HaydenwasrefusedaUSNavycommission,onthegroundsthathewasalmostuneducated.Instead hejoinedtheMarineCorpsbywayofParrisIslandbootcamp,thentransferredtoOSS.Hewasbent uponsheddingtheHollywoodfamehedespised,andchangedhisnameforoperationalpurposesto ‘JohnHamilton’.Hiswife’ssisterhadbeenkilledintheLondonBlitz;thispromptedCarroll,too,to quitthefilmbusiness:fortherestofthewarsheservedwiththeRedCrossinEurope.‘Lt.Hamilton’ becameoneofthesmallarmyofOSSpersonnelwhocrossedtheAtlantictoplayapicaresquebitpartinthatbiggestblockbustermelodramaofall:TheWar. OSSLondonstationchiefWilliamPhillipsdescribedhisownmissionintermsechoedbyhis counterpartsaroundtheworld:‘MydutywastopursueDonovan’sgoalofaglobalUSintelligence service,whileresistingalleffortsoftheBritishSecretInformation[sic]togobbleusup.’TheOSS’s LondonbaseonBrookStreet,afewblocksfromtheUSembassy,eventuallyboastedfourteen outlyingbranches,andgrewtoastrengthof2,000people,includingastellarconstellationof academicssuchasWaltRostow,CraneBrinton,ChandlerMorse.MostofDonovan’smenwereanticolonialist,whichsustainedchronictensionswiththeBritishandFrench.ColonelHaroldHoskins planneda1942expeditionthroughArabcountrieswhichhehopedtopersuadetoexpeltheBritish. Unsurprisingly,thistripwasblockedinLondon;theForeignOfficeandSOEstrove,albeitwithout success,toexcludeOSSfromtheentireMiddleandFarEast,andespeciallyIndia.Therewasanearly Donovanplottooverthrowthepro-VichyprimeministerofTunisia,forwhichthecolonel establisheda$50,000warchest.RobertMurphyoftheStateDepartmentvetoedtheschemebecauseit mustenrageVichyandfrustrateanyhopesofrecruitingitsarmedforcestotheAllies.Amidthe contortionsofAmericanpolicytowardstheFrenchaftertheDecember1942assassinationofAdmiral Darlan,anewOSSpro-GaullistcommandounitwasformedunderthedirectionofaHarvard anthropologistandArabistimpossiblynamedCarletonCoon. StateabortedasuccessionofotherOSSprojectswhichitconsideredlikelyto‘upsetcolonial relationshipswithlocalnativepopulations’.ManyofDonovan’smenbegantoworkontheprinciple that‘inintelligence,theBritisharejustasmuchtheenemyastheGermans’.Fromeverycornerofthe globeAmericanofficersfiredoffastreamofcomplaintsaboutlackofcooperationfromtheir Anglo-Saxonallies.WhentenOSSmenperishedafterplanesflownbyinexperiencedUSAAFcrews crashedwhilecarryingthemtoNorway,itwasallegedthatthemishapoccurredbecausetheBritish refusedtoallowtheagentstobedispatchedinRAFaircraftpilotedbyNorwegians. Mistrustanddisdainweremutual.HughTrevor-RoperwrotewithcharacteristicscorninJanuary 1943abouthisAmericancounterparts:‘thesecallow,touchy,boastful,flatulentinvaders,whoseemto thinkthemselves,aspoliticians,amatchforthecase-hardeneddouble-crossersofstruggling,tortured Europe.Willtheyneversee…thattheyareonlygreatchildren,pamperedchildrenoftherich, amongexperiencedanddesperatesharpers?’WhenajointOSS/SOEheadquarterswasestablishedin Algiers,thetwonations’officersconcealedinformationandplansfromeachother,andtheBritish tooklunchanhouraftertheAmericans’12–1break,inordertodotheirmostsecretbusinessinthe absenceoftheirallies.BickhamSweet-EscottofSOEwasback-handedlydelightedwhena distinguishedIndianmajorwithaDSOwoninthedesertturnedupinWashingtononatourto recoverfromhiswounds,andwasrefusedaccesstoabarbecauseofhiscolour.Afterthatepisode, theBritishofficersaidthathefeltmuchlessembarrassedwhenOSSmenfulminatedinhispresence about‘Britishimperialism’. AsUSchargéd’affairesinLisbon,GeorgeKennanhadtointervenetostoptheOSSfomentinga revoltagainstPortugueseruleintheAzores:Donovan’sagentsviewedPresidentdeOliveiraSalazar simplyasonemorefascistdictatorwhoseremovalmustrepresentagooddeedintheworld,andwere mortallydispleasedtobepreventedfromperformingit.Meanwhile,Eisenhower ’sstaffinNorth AfricaquashedanotherprojecttoassassinateGermangeneralsintheirheadquarters,thoughBritish commandoshadalreadytriedunsuccessfullytokillRommel.In1942anOSSofficerquizzed AdolpheBerleoftheStateDepartmentaboutUSpolicytowardsThailand.Berleturneduphispalms: ‘Wehaven’tgotanypolicyyet.’ThisvacuuminWashington,whichextendedtomanypartsofthe globe,enabledDonovan’sfieldmentoinventtheirownpartylineinthenameoftheUnitedStates.Dr WalterClineoftheOSSRabatstationtoldthepashaofMarrakech,‘TheFrenchhavenothingtodo [inMorocco]…excepttoleaveit,’aremarkthatnaturallyoutragedthecolonialpower.Donovan wrotedismissivelytoFoggyBottom,sayingthatClinewasdoingworkof‘greatvalue’,and authorisedhimtocarryonregardless. An11January1944meetingattheForeignOfficeinLondondiscussedwithalarmDonovan’s assertiontojournaliststhathewasdeterminedtocreateaUSsecretserviceregardlessofopposition fromanyquarter.Menziessaid‘heassumedthisreferencetooppositionwasdirectedagainstMI6and SOE…InhisviewtherewasnopossibilityofpreventingGeneralDonovan[ashehadnowbecome] fromproceedingashewished,andtheonlypossiblecoursewastofightarearguardactionwitha viewtopreventinghimfromcausingunnecessarymischief.’SOEandMI6agreedaboutalmost nothingelse,butwereatoneintheirfearsofthehavocthatmightbewreakedbyOSSofficersinthe field,especiallyintheMediterraneanandSouth-EastAsia.InJuly1945,USplanesdroppedOSS leafletsonTonkin,draftedbyDonovan’sfanaticallyanti-colonialistofficerinHanoi,Captain ArchimedesPatti.TheseproclaimedtotheVietnameseonbehalfoftheUS:‘Weareshortlycomingto Indo-Chinatofreeyou,butwedonotactliketheFrenchwhoareonlycomingtooppressyou,weare yourtrueliberators.’ OneofthemostextraordinaryOSSmissionswasthatofBrookeDolanandIlyaTolstoy,exiled grandsonofthenovelist,whoweredispatchedfromChinainSeptember1942tovisittheten-year-old DalaiLamainLhasa.Theoverlandjourneytookthemthreemonths.Theyweregreetedamiably enoughbytheTibetans,whorequestedaradiotransmitter.TheStateDepartmentobjectedthatthis wouldupsettheChinese,whohadclaimsonTibet,butinNovember1943thesetwasdulydelivered toLhasa,withoutmuchvisibleimpactonthewar.ThetwoAmericansgotbacktoChongqinginJuly, afteraseven-monthodyssey,andwerehastilydispatchedhomeincasetheymetwithan‘accident’at thehandsofChiangKai-shek’ssecretpoliceasthepriceoftheirimpudenceinhavingtraffickedwith theTibetans,whomChinaregardedasitsownsubjects. By1944OSSspecialoperationspersonnelwereoperatingineverytheatreofwar–indeed,thesize andconspicuousnessofsomeAmericanpartiesrenderedthemespeciallyvulnerable.Atwenty-strong teamparachutedintothelowerTatramountainson25September1943tocontactguerrillasinthefar eastofCzechoslovakiaspentweeksinhidingasitssuppliesdwindled,thenwasbetrayedtothe GermansbyaSlovakian;onlytwomenescapedtotheRussianlines.Fifteenwholandednorthof AnzioinMarch1944tosabotagetheLaSpezia–Genoaraillinkwerepromptlycapturedandshotby theGermans,inaccordancewithHitler ’s1942CommandoOrder.Col.FlorimondDukeandhis fellow-membersofaMarch1944OSSmissiontotheHungariangovernmentwerehandedovertothe Germansassoonastheylanded,thoughtheywerefortunateenoughtosurvivethewar.InFebruary 1945,Berlinannouncedthataseventeen-strongOSSandSOEpartycapturedinCzechoslovakiahad beenshotatMauthausenconcentrationcamp–thisincludedJoeMortonofAssociatedPress,theonly warcorrespondenttobeexecutedinthecourseoftheconflict. Theleft-wingenthusiasmsofmanyOSSofficersledtospecialdifficultiesinGreece,wherethey threwtheirfullsupportbehindthecommunists.GeorgeVoumas,aWashingtonattorneyinDonovan’s Cairostation,chargedthatChurchill’sofficers‘werenotinterestedinGreekliberationoreven effectiveprosecutionofthewar,butinnaked[imperialist]politicalinterest’.Britishpolicytowards thefantasticallycomplexGreekimbrogliowasindeedoftenfumbled,buttheOSS’smenwerenaïve insupposingthatthecommunistsofEAM-ELASwouldimposeabenignpolityiftheygainedcontrol ofthecountry.InGreeceasinneighbouringYugoslavia,allthepoliticaloptionsbeforetheAllies wereunpalatable,butitprovedmistakentoallowyoung,idealisticandusuallyignorantOSSandSOE officersonthespottomakejudgementswhichinfluencedthefateofnations.Manysawtheirown roleinunderstandablyromanticterms,aslatter-dayLawrences,andsomemanagedtocreatenoless troublethanhedid. ‘Here,IwasAmerica,’anOSSofficerwhoservedinYugoslaviawrotewonderingly.‘Ihada message,perhapsmerelywords,ofcourse,ofencouragementtoalong-sufferingpeople.’Sterling HaydensaidofayearhespentworkingwiththeYugoslavs:‘Weestablishedatremendouslyclose personalfeelingwiththesepeople.Wehadenormous,Iwouldsayunlimitedrespectforthewaythey werefighting.Wegotquitesteamedupbyit.Imyselfwassteamedupconsiderablybyit.Ihadnever experiencedanythingquitelikethat,anditmadeatremendousimpressiononme.’Hewasfirstposted torunanoperationsbaseontheItaliancoastatMonopoli,southofBari,shippingarmstothe partisans.Thislifelongadventurerfoundhimselfdirectingashuttleserviceoffourteenschooners, sixketchesandtwobrigantines,runningeightymilesacrosstheAdriaticatanaveragespeedofseven knots. Hefellinlovewiththeexperience,andwiththefourhundredYugoslavsworkingthevessels.He wroteinthethirdpersonthathe‘foundhimselfcommittedinawayhehadneverknownbefore…He hadneverknownsuchmen.Therewasaferocityaboutthem…strainingandsweatingforhourson end,refusingtopauseoracceptreliefuntilorderedtodoso.’Likemorethanafewleft-wing AmericanandBritishpersonnelservinginthetheatre,hecametoidealiseTito’smen,writingtoa friendintheUSon22January1944:‘Itoldyouinearlierlettershowreluctantsomeofthelocal BritisharetoreallygoalloutfortheYugoslavs.Myeyesarebeingopenedtoalotofthings…I knownowthatmyentirelifebeforethiswasoneendlesssearchforpleasure.Well,maybeitisn’ttoo latetomakeupforthewastedyears.’ Whocouldblamejuniorofficersforsuccumbingtoromanticism,whentheirchiefwasthe foremostromanticofall?DonovanflewoverJapanese-heldterritoryinaTigerMothbiplanetovisit anOSScampinBurma,andappearedatRooseveltandChurchill’sNovember1943Cairosummitto proposea‘Unity’planforthepartitionofYugoslaviabetweenrivalfactions,whichFDRendorsed. Thegeneralannouncedanintentionhimselftoparachuteintothewilderness,tostage-managea reconciliationbetweenTitoandMihailović.ThisplangotnowherebecausenoneoftheYugoslavs wereinterested;theAmericansafterwardsblamedChurchillforthrowinghissupportbehindTito. BothWesternAlliesmisreadYugoslavia,anditisunlikelythatanypeacefulnon-communistoutcome wasachievable.InMay1944DonovanburstintoLondon,inspectedtheOSSstationandaccusedits staffofdoingtoomuchplanning,notenoughfighting.Heexhortedthem:‘Throwyourplansoutof thewindow!’Confusion,supposedlycreative,wasrestored.Donovanwassokeenforevenhis chairboundoperativestosmellpowderthatthatOctoberhecausedtwoacademicsfromOSS’s Research&Analysisdivision,DavidColinandGeorgePeck,tobeparachutedintothePovalleywith onlyrudimentaryspecialforcestraining.TheywerepromptlycapturedbytheGermans,which causedanOSSofficertoexpresssomewhatheartlessconcernthattheirexperienceofconductingPhD oralexaminationsmighthaveleftthemill-preparedtoresist‘unusualmethodsofinterrogation’. OSSpersonnelwerefamousspenders,asattestedbyinnumerablepaymentdocketsinthearchives, togetherwithaccompanyingprotestsfromtheStateDepartment.Atruckdrivercouldearn200,000 francs–theequivalentof$US4,000or£1,000–bycarryingaboxofdocumentsacrossFrancetothe Spanishborder,withafurther50,000francsonoffertoanybodywhowouldtakesuchacargoonthe lastlegofthejourney,acrosstheborderintoSpain.AcharacteristicsignaltotheUSembassyin Madriddemanded:‘PleaseturnovertoOSSrepresentativeagainsthisreceiptonemillionpesetas fromfundstoyourcreditunderauthorisation37…Youareauthorisedtopay$2000repeattwo thousanddollarstoColonelW.A.Eddy…YouareauthorisedtopaytoColonelRobertA.Solborgin oneorseveralpaymentsatotalof$100,000…Ihavearrangedfreedollarcreditforpurchasebyyou ofonemillionAlgerianfrancswithfurtherpurchaselater…YouareauthorisedtopayColonelW.A. EddyonbehalfoftheOSSthesumof$50,000…’ Theabove-mentionedColonelWilliamEddywasborninSyriatomissionaryparents,servedasan intelligenceofficerinWorldWarI,thenheadedtheEnglishdepartmentatCairo’sAmerican university,whereheintroducedEgyptianstobaseball.InApril1942,inTangierduringDonovan’s pre-OSSincarnation,hedemandedhalfamilliondollarsinoperationalfundstosubvertandthenarm VichyFrenchforcesinNorthAfrica.Whenthechiefsofstaffbaulked,Eddymessagedcrossly:‘If [Robert]MurphyandIcannotbetrustedwithafewmillionfrancsinanemergencythenIshouldbe calledbackandsomebodywhocanbetrustedsent.Wearedesperatelyhopingandwaiting.’Oneof Donovan’smeninWashingtoncommentedhistrionically:‘ThewarmaybewonorlostbyColonel Eddy,andcertainlythedayofvictorywillbeindefinitelyadvancedorretarded.’Thechiefsofstaff remaineddoggedlyunsympathetic,andEddyfailedtogethismoney. SomeswaggeringinitiativesbyDonovan’sagentsalarmedAlliedcodebreakers,amongtheman OSSraidontheJapaneseconsulateinLisbon.ArlingtonHallandBletchleywereappalledwhenthey heardthattheAmericanshadstolencodebooks.Thelastthingtheywantedwasactionthatmight prompttheenemytobelievethathiscommunicationswerecompromised.Towardstheendof1944 FinnishintelligenceapproachedtheOSSinStockholm,offering1,500pagesofSovietcodes, includingkeys.Donovanhastenedtoaccept,andgleefullyinformedtheWhiteHouseofthewindfall. PresidentRoosevelt,however,attheurgingofEdwardStettinius,hisnewsecretaryofstate,ordered thatthecodebooksshouldbehandedovertotheRussianswithoutcopiesbeingmade.Donovandefied theWhiteHousebyphotographingthebooksbeforesurrenderingthem,butthiscanhavegiventhe Americanslittleadvantage,whensomanyOSSstaffersweresecretlybriefingtheNKVD. Evenbythestandardsofthesecretwar,someOSSmessagetrafficwasoutlandish,forinstancethis on3October1944fromCaserta,inItaly,toWashington:‘WelearnthatKingMichaelofRumaniahas urgentlyrequestedOSSrepresentativesinBucharestthat4,000roundsof.45caliberammunitionand 3,000of30millimetercarbineammunitionbesentbyplanefortheRoyalPalace.’InChina,theOSS’s AlghanLusey,aformerUPIcorrespondentinShanghai,requestedadeliveryofsawn-offshotguns fortheuseofChiangKai-shek’sagentsinoccupiedterritories,whomhedescribedas‘aswellbunch ofhard-hitting,honestmen,goodgunmen’.LuseywasrecalledtoWashingtoninJuly1942. Donovan’sstationheadlatercametobelievethatTaiLi,Chiang’ssecretpolicechief–themanwho wantedtheshotguns–wasresponsiblefortheliquidationofseveraloftheOSS’sChineseinformants. DavidBruce,anearlyOSSrecruitandlatterlyadistinguishedheadofitsintelligencebranch, wrote:‘Woetotheofficerwhoturneddownaprojectbecause,onitsface,itseemedridiculous,orat leastunusual.’AlthoughSouthAmericawasnotionallyFBIturf,Donovanplungedenthusiastically intothecontinentanyway.BreckinridgeLongoftheStateDepartmentcomplainedthatDonovan‘is intoeveryone’sbusiness–knowsnoboundsofjurisdiction–triestofilltheshoesofeachagency chargedwithresponsibilityforawaractivity…hashadalmostunlimitedmoneyandaregulararmy atworkandagentsallovertheworld’. TheUSambassadortoSpain,CarltonHayes,sharedwithhisBritishcounterpartSirSamuelHoare ahorrorofspecialoperationsandtheirperpetrators,whichcausedfrequentembarrassmentsinthe Allies’relationswiththefascistdictatorshipofGen.FranciscoFranco.FrankSchoonmaker,authorof asuccessfulseriesofEuropeantravelguides,wascaughtbySpanishpoliceinthespringof1943 passingOSScashtoaFrenchResistancecontact,andlanguishedforsixmonthsinaSpanishjail beforebeingsprung.InJunethatyear,theBritishnavalattachéCaptainAlanHillgarth,wholiaised closelywithMI6,persuadedOSS’sCol.Solborgofthemeritsoflaunchingajointoperationto deposeFrancoandreplacehimwithamilitaryjunta.Londonwiselyvetoedthisscheme,onthe groundsthatitwasbythenobviousthatFrancohadnointentionofenteringthewar. ThefrustrationofthatschemedidnotdeterDonovan’smenfromalmostimmediatelystarting another,organisedfromNorthAfricabyDonaldDownesinsupportoftheanti-FrancoSpanish Resistance.HedispatchedOSS-trainedSpanishagentstomakecontactwiththeRepublicansin Malaga.Theoutcomewasspectacularlymessy:Franco’smentrappedthemall.SomeofDownes’s menwerecaptured,alongwiththeirAmericanweapons.Theprisonerstalked,andnamedDownes andhiscolleagueArthurGoldbergastheirsponsors.WhentheStateDepartmentconfrontedtheOSS withthisconsiderableembarrassment,GoldbergandDonovanpleadedignorance.TheUS nonethelessmadeaformalapologyinMadrid.TheOSS-sponsoredSpaniardswereexecuted. ThereafterDonovanbowedtotheUSambassador ’sinsistencethatthereshouldbenomore operationsagainstFranco. SomeofthecoolerheadswithinDonovan’sorganisationrecognisedthatitsexcesseswere squanderingresourcesandinjuringitsreputation,toscantpurpose.Inthesummerof1943,whilethe brigadier-general–Donovan’snewrank–wasoffroamingtheworld,aclutchofinternalreports expressedalarmaboutOSS’scondition.Oneseniorofficer,GeorgePlatt,compiledamemorandum inAugustwhichwasforwardedtoDonovan.Plattwroteof‘adeteriorationofmorale’.Nobody exceptafewpeopleclosesttothegeneral,hesaid,‘canputhisfingeronanythingconcretethatthe organisationhasaccomplished’.Anotherseniorfigure,ElleryHuntington,warnedof‘adangerous lackofcohesion’.DonovanreturnedtoWashingtoninOctobertofindasix-pagememorandumfrom agroupofseniorstaffers,whichstatedbrutally:‘OSShasgrowntoobigandisengagedintoomany diverseactivities.’ThegroupconcludedbyproposingthatDonovanshouldrelinquishexecutive controloftheorganisation,effectivelybecoming‘chairmanoftheboard’whiledepartmentalchiefs ranitsoperations.Itwasplainthattheseviewsweresharedbysomeoftheablestandbest-informed ofOSS’sseniorstaffers.Thecriticshitabrickwall,orratherDonovan.Hedismissedtheirproposals outofhand,anduntilthewarendedheldOSSonthecoursehehadsetforit.Hehimselfremaineda defiantlyfreespirit,servingasringmasterforahostoflike-mindedindividualistsandadventurers. OSSearnedareputationascontroversialasthatofSOEforpromotingcommunistinterestsin occupiedEuropeandtheBalkans.Donovanwaswarnedthathehadrecruitedmanyknown‘Reds’,of whommorebelow.Heshruggedinresponse,‘Inthatkindofgame,ifyou’reafraidofwolves,you havetostayoutoftheforest.’Gen.AlbertWedermeyer,oneofAmerica’smoreruthlessproconsuls inChina,wrotesourlyafterthewar:‘Wewereverymuchinthepositionofbeinginafootball contest,goingouttowinthegame,andthenwithvictoryachieved,proposingonlytoreturnhometo celebratethevictory.Wewerejustthatnaïve.Wedidnotseemtounderstandthatinfightingwarswith theGermansandtheItaliansinEurope,andwiththeJapaneseintheFarEast,weshouldstriveto createtheconditionswhichwouldbringarealisticandenduringpeace.’Yetitwasaskingtoomuchof mostWesternAlliedsoldiers,politiciansandsecretagentstoconductoperationsagainsttheAxiswith aneyeovertheirshoulderstowhatwouldfollowvictory.EvenWinstonChurchillonlybegantodo solatein1944,whenthewar ’soutcomewasassured.StalinaloneamongtheAlliedwarlords conductedpolicyandstrategyinironcladaccordancewithhisownpost-warpurposes,inwhichhis AmericanandBritishadmirersstrovemanfullytoassisthim. 2 I V O RYTO W ER S ItisaseasytomockOSS’s‘trackandfieldstars’andtheirexoticoperationsasitistoderideSOE’s wilderactivities.InWashington,however,Donovancreatedsomethingverydifferentandmore impressive.TheResearch&AnalysisdivisionrecruitedsomeofthefinestbrainsinUSacademe, whichbetween1942and1945producedanextraordinaryrangeofreports,mostoftheminteresting,a fewoutstanding.Nowarringnation’sintelligenceservicesmatchedthequality–andquantity–of R&A’sstudies.ThedivisionwasheadedbyJamesFinneyBaxter,presidentofWilliamsCollege,and drewitsanalysts–someofthemlaterNobelPrize-winners–fromthirty-fivecampusesacrossthe nation.BickhamSweet-EscottofSOEtouredthedepartmentwhilevisitingtheUS,andcamehome lamentingthelackofanythingcomparableinLondon.Britain’sJointIntelligenceStaffhadonlya handfulofmenundertakingresearchtowhichR&Acommittedhundreds. ThedepartmentstarteditslifeintheannexeoftheLibraryofCongress,thenmovedtoabuildingat 23rdandEStreetwhicheventuallyhousedninehundredanalysts,coveringeverycorneroftheglobe, togetherwithclericalandsupportstaff.Theacademicswhodominatedthepayrollincludedadozen enemyaliensandfortyhistorians,sevenofthempastorfuturepresidentsoftheAmericanHistorical Institution.WhenDonovanquizzedonerecruit,PaulSweezy,followingwarningsthathewasa notoriousStalinist,Sweezysoothedthecolonelwithoutmuchdifficulty,sayingthathewasamere socialist,‘moreorlesslike[Britain’sHarold]LaskiandNyeBevan.Theonlything[Donovan]was interestedinwaswhetherIwasinfavourofthrowingbombsandstreetrioting.IassuredhimIwas not,whichseemedtosatisfyhim.’R&Aalsohiredsuchwell-knownMarxistsasFranzNeumann, HerbertMarcuse–OSS’sleadinganalystonGermany–andOttoKirchheimer. Theyreadpressreports,transcriptsofenemybroadcastsmonitoredbytheFederal CommunicationsCommission,PoWinterrogationsandcablesfromOSSstations.Inthelastyearof thewartheyalsoaddressedlikelypost-warproblems.R&Aproducedreportsonsubjectsasdiverse asrailtransportontheEasternFront,thepoliticalviewsofCharlesdeGaulle,inflationinBurmaand theguerrillacampaigninthePhilippines–thoughSWAPO’sC-in-CGeneralDouglasMacArthur refusedtoallowDonovan’speopletooperateinhistheatre. SomeR&AanalystssharedtheOSS’scollectivedelusionsaboutthepotentialofguerrillaactionto influencegrandoutcomes.TheCentralEuropeansectionassertedthatinternalpoliticalResistance wouldcontributeasmuchasexternalmilitaryforcetothefinalcollapseofNaziGermany:‘The record[ofResistance]isatributetohumanenduranceandcourage,andtherevelationofagreat hope.’ThisviewreflectedthevisionaryhopesofitsGerman-bornauthors,ratherthanrepresenting anevidence-basedpoliticaljudgement.Theywereonstrongergroundintheiroppositiontothe Allieddoctrineofunconditionalsurrender,whichtheysaidfosteredNaziclaimsthattheonlychoices forGermanywerevictoryorannihilation:‘WhatiswantedisapositivegoalforGermanywhichwill dispelthisfearandencourageGermansoldiersandcitizensaliketorevoltagainsttheirNazileaders.’ Theanalystssuggestedthattheonlycrediblegroupingaroundwhomtoformadomestic ResistancetoHitlerwerethecommunists.TheyurgedtellingtheGermanpeoplethatifthey overthrewtheNazistheircountrycouldescapeAlliedinvasion.Whenthechiefsofstaffdeclaredthat theAlliesshouldaspiretooccupyGermanyaheadofanyinternalrevolution,FranzNeumann stronglydissented:‘ArevolutionarymovementaimingattheeradicationofNazismmaybehighly desirable.’InAugust1944,whenSHAEFissueda‘HandbookforMilitaryGovernment’,thecontent ofwhichwasmuchinfluencedbyR&A,USTreasurysecretaryHenryMorgenthauwasoutragedto discoverthatitincludedproposalsforrevivingtheGermaneconomy–hehimselfwastheprincipal advocateofpastoralisingtheentirecountry.Thedepartmentwasmoreconsciousthananyother governmentbodyoneithersideoftheAtlanticaboutwhatHitlerwasdoingtotheJews,formanyof itsstaffwerethemselvesJewish.InOctober1943LeonardKreigernotedinawidelycirculatedpaper thatavisittoDenmarkbyAdolfEichmannindicatedthat‘theDanishpogromisthebeginningofthe finalcampaigntoridEuropeoftheJews’. TheOSSteamresearchingtheEasternFrontwashandicappedbythewallofsilencebehindwhich theSovietUnionconducteditswar–evencopiesofPravdaandIzvestiareachedWashingtonsix weekslate.SolittledatawasprovidedbyMoscowthatitprovedeasiertoestimateGermanoffensive potentialthanSovietdefensivecapabilities.AverellHarriman,USambassadorinMoscow,refusedto acceptOSSmenonhisstaff,judgingthathehaddifficultiesandembarrassmentsenoughalready; onlyinApril1944didayounganalyst,RobertTucker,jointheembassytomonitorSovietforeign policy.R&AnonethelessproducedsomeprescientreportsonHitler ’spredicamentanddifficultiesin Russia,thefirstofthemin1942.ThroughmanymonthsduringwhichthemilitaryleadersofBritain andtheUSwerechronicallyscepticalaboutRussia’sprospectsofsurvival,Donovan’smen emphasisedtheGermans’hugesupplydifficulties,andquestionedtheirlikelihoodofsuccess.The study’smethodologywasremarkable,includingtheuseoftechnicalinformationontheefficiencyof locomotivesatsub-zerotemperatures,andtheproblemsofconvertingEuropeanrollingstockto Russiantrackgauge.InovercrowdedWashingtonbackoffices,OSSresearchersstudiedthedaily foragerequirementsofthetypeofhorsesusedbyGermaninfantryandcomputedammunition expenditurebyinfantry,panzerandmotoriseddivisionsrespectively,atdifferentintensitiesofcombat activity.Theydeployedmeteorologicaldatatoassessthesupplyrequirementsoftwohundred divisionsfightingacrossa1,500-milefrontfor167days.Atwo-hundred-pagestudyoftheEastern Frontproducedinthemidstofthe1942–43Stalingradbattlecorrectlyidentifiedtheinsuperable logisticalproblemsfacingPaulus’sbeleagueredSixthArmy. R&A’seconomicsub-division,headedbyEmileDespres,attheoutsetmademanyofthesame mistakesastheBritish,supposingHitler ’sindustrialbasefullymobilisedin1941;throughoutthe yearthatfollowed,OSScontinuedtounderestimateGermanproduction.Laterinthewaritdidbetter, tearingupBritishintelligenceestimatesofGermanaircraftandtankproductioninfavourofitsown ‘deductiveproductivecurves’.OSSeconomistsrightlyjudgedthatmanpower,ratherthanoilorfood, wouldprovethekeybottleneck.SvendLarsen,aneconomistofDanishorigin,decidedthatBritish intelligenceestimatesofenemybattlecasualtiesweretoohigh.Hebegantoextrapolatefromthe deathnoticesofofficersinGermany’spress–OSSinBernforwardedfifty-sevenGerman newspapers–andLarsen’sestimateswereafterwardsfoundtohavebeenamazinglyaccurate. MeanwhileR&Abecamefascinatedbythepossibilitiesoftabulatingvehicleserialnumbersto computeGermanproduction.Afteroneofitsfieldresearcherscheckedeverywreckedpanzeronthe Tunisianbattlefieldin1943,thedepartmentreported–correctly–thatwhileGermanproductionwas lowerthanhadbeenthought,itwasstillincreasing.Therewasanin-housejokethatwhenanR&A manwasaskedforaphonenumberhereplied,‘Don’tknow,butIcanestimateit.’ R&A’sjudgementwasleastimpressive,mostnaïve,abouttheprospectsforfutureWestern relationswiththeSovietUnion,thoughthisisunsurprisingwhensomanyofitsleadinglightswere communists.TheirreportsadoptedanalmostuniformlybenignviewofStalin’spolity.PaulSweezy warnedthattheimperialisticBritishmightforceAmericaintoanunnecessaryconfrontationwith Stalin.ThedepartmentpressedforUSpolicytodistanceitselffromthatofBritain.GeroidRobinson cabledtheLondonOSSteamon20May1944,expressinghisconviction‘thateverythingpossible shouldbedonetoavoidaclashofinterestsbetweentheBritishandtheAmericansontheonehand, andtheRussiansontheother ’,thoughheadmitted:‘Itwillnotbeeasytodevelopaworking compromisebetweenanexpandinganddynamicpower(theSovietUnion),adevelopingbut essentiallysatisfiedpower(theUnitedStates),andapowerthatshowssymptomsofdecline(the BritishEmpire).’HearguedthatitbehovedtheWesttoerronthesideofgenerosityinmaking concessionstoStalin.GivenwisdomandenergyinLondonandWashington,hesaid,peacefulcoexistencewasattainable. BeforeYalta,R&Aproducedareportassertingthatattheendofthewar‘Russiawillhaveneither theresourcesnor,asfaraseconomicfactorsareconcerned,theinclinationtoembarkonadventurist foreignpolicieswhich,intheopinionofSovietleaders,mightinvolvetheUSSRinaconflictora criticalarmamentsracewiththeWesternPowers.’Theywerecorrect,however,inpredictingthatthe USSRcould,ifitchose,pursueitspost-wareconomicandindustrialreconstructionwithoutneedfor Americancash,whichtheStateDepartmentstillassumedwouldproveaninvincibleforcein Washington’sdealingswithMoscow.R&AwasrightalsotoacknowledgetheneedfortheUStotreat theUSSRasanequalinthenewworld. R&AcamenearerthananyotherorganisationintheworldtofulfillingtheBritishnavalofficer DonaldMcLachlan’svisionthatproperlyconductedintelligenceworkshouldbeascholarlyprocess. Someofitsreportswerefanciful,butothersreflectedtheremarkablegiftsoftheirauthors.R&A producedmaterialmoreimpressivethananythingissuedbyMI6,theAbwehror–sofarasweknow –theNKVDandGRU.Unlessintelligenceservicesachieveextraordinaryaccesstothehighplacesof enemiesorprospectiveenemies,asdidRichardSorge,inHughTrevor-Roper ’swords‘morecanbe deducedfromanintelligentstudyofpublicsourcesthanbyanynumberof“reliable”butunintelligent “agents”listeningatkeyholesorswappingdrinksatbars’.AsignificantpartofR&A’sachievement wasitsexploitationofopensourcesalongside,andindeedmoreintensivelythan,secretones. Howmuchdidthisterrificconcentrationofbrainpowerinfluencethewareffort?OSS’sreports wereroutinelycirculatedacrosstheadministration.Unfortunately,however,andlikeallintelligence material,fewofthemgotreadbydecision-makers.America’sgeneralsinthefieldwerechronically scepticalaboutOSS-generateddata.OneofthecomplaintsaboutR&A’soutputwasthatoperations staffsfoundithardtopersuadethescholarstoproducequickbriefsinrealtimeaboutissuesthat commanderswereobligedtoaddresswithinhoursordays.Thedivision’sintellectualspreferred insteadtolabourforweeksorevenmonthson‘big-picture’themes.BarryKatz,thehistorianof R&A,acknowledgesthatitsactivitieshad‘atbestalimitedinfluenceontheprosecutionofthewar ’, thoughheisconsoledbythereflectionthatitrepresented‘anindisputablybrilliantepisodeinthe historyofideas,ofintellectuals,andofintelligence’. TheBritishintelligencemachinebenefitedinthesecondhalfofthewarfromretainingaleavening ofprofessionalsoldiersamongitsclevercivilians,whoimposedaminimumofdisciplineand emphasisedoperationalimperatives.Theuniformedcontingentunderstoodhowtosecureanaudience fortheirwaresamongthechiefsofstaffand–onthewhole–contributedsomecommonsensetothe headydeliberationsoftheacademics.OSS’sR&Amighthavemademoreimpactonthewarhadit pursuedthesamepersonnelpolicy,ratherthanleavingitseggheadstoploughtheirfurrowsin isolationfromthearmedforces’hierarchy. OneoftheNKVD’shighlyplacedAmericaninformants,identifiedonlyas‘Z’,reportedinlateJuly 1944:‘ThemainprincipleoftheentireOSSistheprincipleofamateurism…poorlytrained…the CinderellaoftheAmericansecretservices…TheOSSowesitsexistenceonlytoGeneralDonovan’s personalpopularityandnottoitswork.’Donovanandhisstationheadsoccasionallycaughtthe attentionofAlliedwarlordswitharemark,signalorreport.Butnonationalleaderorchiefofstaff hadtimeorinclinationroutinelytostudythecerebrationsofR&A,andmostofOSS’soutputwas ignoredbyitsintendedconsumers.America’smilitaryleaders,liketheirBritishcounterparts, focusedoverwhelminglyonenemywirelessinterceptsastheirprincipalsourceofintelligence,andit ishardtoarguethattheywerewrongtodoso. Nooneindividual,notevenRooseveltorMarshall,exercisedthesameauthorityovertheUSwar effortasdidChurchillinBritain,andthustherewasnobodyinWashingtontoimposeoverarching disciplineontheintelligencecommunity,tocurbtherivalryandindeedanimositybetweentheUS ArmyandNavy,andtametheexcessesofDonovan’sorganisationinafashionthatmighthavehelped ittosecuremorerespect.BecauseAmericaisamuchlargercountry,itsintellectualcommunityis lessintimateandmorediffuse.Duringthewaryearsitscodebreakersrecordedextraordinary achievements,buttheynevermobilisedanddeployedtheirnation’scivilianbrainsaseffectivelyas BritainuseditsOxbridgevillages. ThemindsetandconductofOSSreflectedthatofAmericaatlarge.Itsmenandwomenexudeda confidenceunharrowedbythehorrorsofBlitzkriegandofdefeatssuchasRussia,Britainandmany otherwartornnationshadknown.Theytookforgrantedawealthofresourcesnootherbelligerent couldmatch.ArthurSchlesinger,oneofthemanyacademicsontheOSSpayroll,madethecasefor itschief’sdefence:‘Donovanwasinhiseccentricwayaremarkableman,awinningcombinationof charm,audacity,imagination,optimismandenergy–aboveallenergy.Hewasadisorderly administratorandanimpetuouspolicymaker,racingfromheretotherewithideasandinitiativesand thencheerfullymovingontosomethingelse…Hewasexasperatingbutadorable.’ StewartAlsopandThomasBraden,whoservedasfieldagents,declared,‘heranOSSlikea countryeditor ’.MostofDonovan’sofficersreachedactivetheatresonlywhenthedarkestdaysofthe conflictwereover,andvictorywasnotindoubt.Theirbeliefthatnothingwasimpossiblewasin manywaysadmirable.ButtheirimpatiencewiththecautiousandscepticalBritishreflectedalackof understandingofwhatChurchill’speoplehadbeenthrough,andoftheconstraintswhichBritain’s relativepovertyimposedonitswar-making.Moreover,ifsomeofthepoliticaldifficultiesand dilemmasidentifiedbytheBritishbecameexcusesforinertia,theOSS’slungesintoactionwerenot infrequentlyill-judged.Theorganisation’smostimpressivecontributionwasthatofitseconomic analysts,whodidbetterthananyoneelseintheAlliedcamp,BritishorAmerican,inprobingthe realitiesandvulnerabilitiesofHitler ’swareconomy.By1945Donovan’smenhadlearnedalot. BickhamSweet-EscottofSOEwrote:‘[OSS’s]bitterestdetractorswouldbeforcedtoadmitthatthey hadbecomequiteasgoodastheBritishatgettingsecretintelligenceandcarryingoutspecial operations,andIpersonallythoughttheyweredoingitbetter.’ Itiseasytolavishscepticism,evenscorn,ontheexcessesofbothAmericanandBritishwartime specialforces,OSSandSOEforemostamongthem.TheGermansmadelittleuseofirregularunits, thoughtheNazileadershipsometimesfantasisedaboutthem:Himmlerwassufficientlyimpressedby Russia’spartisansthatin1942heorderedWalterSchellenbergtosetupasimilarorganisation, codenamed‘Zeppelin’,whichtrainedanddispatchedreconnaissancegroupsbehindtheRussianlines, thoughnottomuchpurpose.In1943theSSchiefinstructedSchellenbergtocontactafamouspre-war mountaineer,MaxSchaefer,andinstructhimtoorganiseanewHimalayanexpedition,toinclude agentswhocouldoperateinsideIndia.Inreality,however,onlytheBrandenburgRegimentandsuch buccaneersastheSS’sOttoSkorzenycarriedoutsignificantspecialoperations;theWehrmacht remainedinstitutionallyscepticalaboutthem. YetitisinterestingtospeculateabouttheconsequenceshadtheGermansdonemoresooner,when theyhadbothmeansandopportunities.IfBritainhadbeenraidedin1940–41,largeresourceswould havehadtobedivertedtodomesticsecurity:theHomeGuard–‘Dad’sArmy’–wouldnothave sufficed.AparatroopassaultonChurchill,mostplausiblyatChequers,couldhavepaidenormous dividends.Likewise,afewU-boat-launchedcommandoraidsontheUnitedStates’sshorelinecould havewreakedhavocandpanic,howeverslightthematerialdamagetheyinflicted.TheAllied approachtosecretwarmayoftenhavebeenwastefulandmisguided,butitwasmoreimaginativethan thatoftheWehrmacht,anddeliveredsomerealsuccesses,especiallyduringthelongyearsbeforeDDayinJune1944,whenonlyrelativelysmallBritishandAmericangroundforceswereengagingthe Axis.AsWinstonChurchillbrilliantlyunderstood,specialoperationssustainedasenseofmomentum inthewareffortwhichwaspartlyspurious,butmorallyimportant.TheactivitiesofSOE,OSSand thearmedforces’‘privatearmies’consumedextravagantresourcesandsometimesdegeneratedinto juveniletheatricals.Buttheymadeapropagandacontributionlargerandmoreusefulthantheir militaryone. 3 A LLEN D ULLES : TA LK I NGTO GER M A NS OneAmericangainedmorepersonalcreditfromthesecretwarthananyother.AllenDulles,‘Mr Burns’,OSScodenumber110,afuturechiefoftheCIA,washailedin1945asthenearestthingtoa masterspyhisnationhadproduced.HewasaNewYorker,sonofaliberalPresbyterianministerwith influentialfamilyconnectionsinWashington,whoattendedPrincetonandtravelledwidelyinEurope, includingadiplomaticpostinginSwitzerland.HeservedwiththeUSdelegationtothe1919Versailles peaceconference,andthereafterspentsomeyearsattheStateDepartmentbeforetakingupacareeras acorporateandinternational-relationslawyer.InthatrolehemetpoliticiansincludingNeville Chamberlain,RamsayMacDonald,LéonBlum–andAdolfHitler.Aprominentinterventionistlong beforePearlHarbor,forsomemonthsin1941–42heservedasNewYorkbureauchiefoftheCOI, forerunnerofOSS,locatedintheRockefellerCenteralongside‘LittleBill’Stephenson’sBritish SecurityCoordination. InNovember1942DonovanpostedDulles,thenagedforty-nine,tobecomeOSS’smaninBern, underdiplomaticcoverasspecialassistanttotheUSminister,LelandHarrison.Heacceptedno salary,butreceived$1,000amonthinexpensestosustainamodestlyluxuriouslifestyle.Hiswife Cloverstayedathome,probablynogreatsorrowtotheembryospymaster,whoseinfidelitieswere manyandvarious:inSwitzerlandheformedacloserelationshipwithCountessWallyToscanini,wife ofanItalianpoliticianwhospentthewarthere,supposedlyengagedonreliefwork. Dulleswasasmartman,whosebenign,avuncular,pipe-smokingmannerinspiredconfidence.He establishedhimselfinaflatat23Herrengrasse,assistedbyGerovonGaevernitz,aresidentGerman businessmanwithaUSpassport.UntiltheAugust1944liberationofFrance,theOSSstaffin Switzerlandwasrestrictedtofiveofficersandtwelvecipherenesandsecretaries,becauseofthe logisticalproblemsoftransportingAmericansintothelandlockedcountry.Beyondorder-of-battle reports,adominantthemeinDulles’cablestoWashingtonwasfunding.GettingcashintoBernwas complicated,andtheOSSteamspentplenty:by1944,thestationhadfortyinformantsongenerous salaries.DullescomplainedbitterlyabouttheshortageofcredibleSwisssources,claimingthathehad topaythepriceofbeingaJohnny-come-lately;between1939and1942otherAlliedsecretservices hadsweptupalltheavailablelocalinformants–indeedmany,includingRudolfRössler,multi-tasked forseveralnations.TheOSSstationchiefhadmanyAmericanfriendsincommonwithFrederick ‘Fanny’vandenHeuvel,hisMI6counterpart,buttheirrelationshipwascharacterisedbyrivalryrather thancollaboration. Dullesbecameanimportantsemi-overtdiplomaticfigure,ratherthanamanoftheshadowslike AlexanderRadó.Hewasahigh-profileAmerican,readilyaccessibletoinfluentialGermans.Itwas evidenttoallthosewithaneyetothefuturethattheUnitedStateswouldbearbitratingthis,and rumourassertedthatDulleswasasecretrepresentativeoftheWhiteHouse.Farfromhimneeding painstakinglytobuildnetworksofinformants,everybodywhoknewanything–togetherwitha generousquotaoffraudsterswhopretendedto–beatapathtohisdoor.Hebecamefriendlywith RogerMasson,theSwissintelligencechief,andmetHansHausamann,founderoftheBuroHa,atthe homeofZürichpublisherEmilOprecht.HeheldconversationswithMajorMaxWaibel,whoran Swissintelligence’sLucernestation,thoughWaibeldidnotdisclosehis‘Viking’intelligencelineinto Germany.AnintermediaryactingonbehalfofWalterSchellenbergalsoconductedaninconclusive dalliancewiththeAmerican.Allthepartiesexchangedagooddealofinformation,theusualblendof truthandfalsehood. Dulleswasnothinglikeatraditionalofficerofanynation’ssecretservice;hehadambitionsforhis ownrole,farbeyondmereespionage.NealPetersen,editoroftheDullespapers,haswritten:‘Hewas notjustasemi-autonomousintelligenceproconsulwithintheOSS,butawould-begrandstrategistfor theWest.’ItisworthconsideringDulles’reportsinsomedetail,becausetheyvividlyillustratethe virtuesandvicesofAmerica’smostprominentoverseasintelligenceofficer.Herecognisedfromthe outsetthatnobodyinWashingtonhadacoherentvisionofhowEuropeshouldemergefromthewar, andhimselfsetaboutfillingthatvacuum.InDecember1942hewastoutingCountCarloSforzaas Italy’smostrespectednon-fascistpolitician,andurgingthattheAlliesshouldfeedunrestinthat countryratherthaninvadeit,withtheprospectoffightingacampaign‘againstaunitedGermanand Italianmilitaryopposition’.TotheveryendofthewarhearguedagainsttheAlliedpolicyof insistenceuponunconditionalsurrender:‘WhateverourfinalpolicytowardsGermany,weshould todaytrytoconvincetheGermanpeoplethatthereishopeforthemindefeat,thattheinnocentwillbe protected,whilethepunishmentoftheguiltywillbethroughlegalprocess.’ ManyofDulles’dispatchesreadlikethereportsofanewspaperforeigncorrespondent,suchasone of14December1942:‘ItalyisfullofGermantroops,andtotalestimatedstrengthisbetween150and 200thousand…Naples:EveryonecriticizesMussolini.Thereisunbelievableconfusion.Itis importanttonotethatpeopleunderstandthatbombingraidsarenecessary.Rome:Governmentoffices areallgoingtoFrosinone,Avezzano,Chaeti,AguilaandRieti;andhotelsarebeingrequisitionedfor warpurposes…Pistoia:mainconnectionbetweenBolognaandFlorence…railroadbridges.Novi Ligure:twoimportantrailroadbridges.Verona:shouldbebombedimmediatelysinceitisan extremelyimportantrailroadcenter…Modena:AttheendofJanuaryaspecialschoolforflamethrowingunitswillgraduate780candidatesaslieutenants.’ DullesprovidedanongoingstreamofreportsabouttheGermandomesticopposition–‘the Breakers’,ashecalledthem–whosespokesmenvisitedhimwithafrequencythatsuggested remarkablecarelessnessabouttheirownsecurity.TheforemostofthesewastheenormousHans Gisevius,theAbwehr ’sZürichagent,whomtheOSSmandubbed‘Tiny’.Dulles’cookreportedthese visitstotheGermanembassy,butuntilFebruary1944GiseviuswasabletocoverhimselfinBerlinby assertingthathemettheAmericanonCanaris’sinstructions.Amongmuchelse,heprovidedalistof allegedlytrustworthyanti-Naziswhomightserveinapost-warGermangovernment.Dulleseagerly forwardedthistoWashington,andcabledinJanuary1943:‘Iamoftheimpressionthatthisisthe momentforadriveofvigortoeffectaseparationoftheNazisandHitlerfromthebalanceofthe Germanpeople,andholdoutatthesametimehopetotheGermanpeoplethatsurrenderontheirpart doesnotmeanthatdestructionwillbefalltheindividualandthestate.’On3Februaryhedescribeda meetingwith‘theprominentpsychologistProfessorCGJung’:‘hisopinionsonthereactionsof Germanleaders,especiallyHitlerinviewofhispsychopathiccharacteristics,shouldnotbe disregarded’. Hedispatchedmanyreportsonenemysecretweapons,notallfanciful,fortheyhadbeensupplied byhisGermanvisitors:robottanks;‘offensivepreparationsforwarfarebygas.Therearenow availableinquantities,large-calibregasbombs’;testflightsoffleetsofflying-boatsdesignedtobe crashedonLondonladenwithexplosives.On8August1943heannouncedthat‘Gotham,andother pointsonourAtlanticseaboard,willbesubjectedtobombingbyplanesthatarenowbeinginstalled inseveralU-boats.’On25April1944hesuggestedthat‘inParisdogsarebeingrequisitionedinlarge numbers’,andthatGermanandJapanesescientistswereexploringbiologicalwarfare.On2May DullesreportedtheGermansexperimentingwithaweapontofreezetheatmosphereto250degrees belowzerobytubesconnectedtotheundersidesoftheirfighters,whichwouldthenflyoverAllied bombersandprecipitateicing.‘TheNazisregardtheresultsasdefinitive.’ FritzKolbe,aminordiplomatbornin1900whowasservingasaGermanForeignOfficecourier, arrivedinBernduringthesummerof1943withabriefcasebulgingwithsecretdocuments,whichhe initiallyofferedtotheBritish.MorbidfearsabouttraffickingwithsupposedlydisaffectedGermans– memoriesofVenlo–causedMI6torebuffhim.HeturnedinsteadtoDulles,whowelcomedhimwith openarmsandgavehimasourcecodenameas‘GeorgeWood’.Thereafter,thecouriersmuggled morethan1,600classifieddocumentstotheAmericans,includinginformationonthelocationsofV1andV-2plants;about‘Cicero’s’raidsonthebriefcaseoftheBritishambassadorinAnkara; genocideinHungary;togetherwithamoundofJapanesematerial.TheBritish,andespeciallyClaude Dansey,continuedtoinsistthatKolbewasadoubleagent.Intruth,hewasmerelyadrabcivilservant whoattractedlittlenoticefromhismasters,butwasmotivatedtodefyandbetraythembyaprofound decency. DulleswasunlovedbyMI6,whosechiefsclaimedthathe‘lendshimselfeasilytoanystriking proposalwhichlookslikenotoriety’.DanseyincludedtheOSS’sBernchiefinabroaderdismissal: ‘Americanseverywhere“swalloweasilyandarenotcritical”.’BothBroadwayandHansGisevius alertedDullesthatsomeUScodeswerecompromised,thoughtheAmericanswereslowtoheedthe warningandchangethem.DanseywasentirelywronginquestioningtheauthenticityofGiseviusand Kolbeassources,buthewasjustifiedinsuggestingthatDulleswasnaïve,especiallyaboutthe GermanResistance.ThoughitsmembersopposedtheNazis,mostwereconservativesandnationalists whocherishedextraordinarydelusionsthatinanegotiationwiththeAlliesfollowingthefallofthe regimetheymightsuccessfullyupholdGermany’sclaimsontheswollenfrontiersHitlerhadseized. DullestoldWashingtonlittleaboutthegrotesqueSwissprofiteeringfromtheconflict,notablyby traffickingwiththeNazisforashareofthespoilsoftheslaughterofEurope’sJews.Hemusthave knownsomethingatleastaboutthis,butwasprobablyreluctanttoexposedirtylinenthatmight threatenhisamicablerelationshipwiththeSwissauthoritiesandthesecurityofhisbaseofoperations –neitherMI6northeOSSstationeverincurredthesortofharassmentbyRogerMasson’s intelligenceservicethatfellupontheSoviet‘Lucy’Ring. TheAmericanhadplentytosayaboutGermansecretweapons,whichconfirmedreportsreaching theWesternAlliesfromothersources.On24June1943hesentareasonablyaccuratereporton Germanrocket-testingatPeenemünde,sayingthatquantityproductionwasexpectedtobeginin SeptemberorOctober,withlargermodelsatanexperimentalstage.Healsomentionedlong-range giantcannon,butsaidthathelackedthetechnicalknowledgetoevaluatetheirpotential.On9 September1943hewarnedthatthe‘rocketbombshouldbetakenveryseriously’,andinDecember identified‘Professor[Wernervon]Braun’asakeyfigureinitsevolution.On10Decemberhe reportedworkonnewadvancedGermansubmarinesfittedwithSchnorkelunderwaterbreathing devices.HeprovidedinformationontheGermannuclearresearchprogramme,thoughhecouldnot offeranycluestotheonlyquestionthatmattered:howclosewereHitler ’sscientiststobuildinga Bomb? AsfortheplightofEurope’sJews,on10March1943DullestoldWashingtonthatthusfarinthe year,15,000GermanJewshadbeenarrested.On12JunehedescribedHitler ’sangertowardsthe BudapestregimefordecliningtohandoverHungary’sJewishminority.Ingeneral,however,neither fromBernnorfromotherAlliedintelligencesourceswastherewasmuchtrafficaboutthe Holocaust,eveninthelatterstagesofthewar.Thisreflectednotaconspiracyofsilence,butrathera pervasiveconsciousnessthattheNaziswerekillinglargenumbersofpeoplealloveroccupied Europe–Poles,Greeks,French,Russianprisoners,Yugoslavs,Italians–togetherwithafailureto recognisethatthescaleandnatureoftheJewishgenocidetranscendedallothermanifestationsof massmurder.Alliedintelligence-gatherersfocusedoverwhelminglyontransmittingandanalysing informationthatseemedrelevanttowinningthewar,ratherthantoilluminatingtheplightofHitler ’s victims. On12June1943,DullesforwardedtoWashingtonabrieffromGiseviusaboutHitler ’spersonal dominanceofmilitaryoperations;thefactthattheStalingraddisasterderivedfromtheFührer ’s acceptanceofGöring’sassurancethathecouldsupplythegarrisonbyair;thatBerlin’sdecisionto reinforceNorthAfricareflecteddefianceofhisgenerals’advice.DullesdescribedKlugeand MansteinastheablestGermancommanders,butsaidthatneithertheynoranyoftheirpeershadthe couragetoresisttheFührer ’swill.ThiswasusefulandreasonablyaccuratebackgroundforUS strategy-makers. AlltheintelligencereachingAlliedcommandersbeforetheAnglo-AmericanlandingsinSicilyon 9July1943andatSalernoon3SeptemberconfirmedHitler ’sintentiontoabandonsouthernItaly.On 7JulyDullescabledfromBern,reportinghisGermaninformants’viewthatBerlinintendedtotreat theItalianpeopleruthlessly,butthattheWehrmachtwouldoffernoseriousresistanceinthesouth, stakingeverythingonadefenceofthePovalley.On29Julyhewentfurther,saying,‘Wehavereports thatsouthernItalyisbeingvacatedbyNazitroops’–thesamemessageaswasreachingthejoint chiefsofstaffthroughUltra.TheyhadnomeansofguessingthatHitlerwouldchangehismindwhen Kesselring,aftertanglingwiththeAnglo-AmericanarmiesatSalerno,reportedthathewasconfident ofbeingabletocontaintheminthesouthformanymonths. ThedominantthemeofDulles’reportingtoWashingtonforthelasttwoyearsofthewarwasthatif theUSthrewitssupportbehindtheGermanoppositionmovement,Hitlercouldbeoverthrownanda peacenegotiatedwithanewmoderateregime.On23August1943hesentanemotionalmessage suggestingthatthedomesticmoodinGermanyhadbecomedesperate:‘Therearenopolitically strongGeneralsinview,butFalkenhausenandRundstedtarebothknowntobeanti-Nazis.Göringis ineclipseandrumorinBerlinhasitthathemadeanattempttogettoSweden.BormannandHimmler areincontroversy.’Nextday,hewaxedevenmoreoptimistic:‘anythingmighthappeninGermany… Ifwekeepapplyingpressure[Hitler ’soverthrow]mostlikelywillhappenbeforetheendoftheyear.’ On19Augusthepleaded:‘CanwenotdosomethingduringoraftertheQuebec[Roosevelt–Churchill summit]conferenceinthewayofappealingtothemassesintheAxiscountries?…Ifwetake concertedmeasuresinboththepsychologicalandmilitaryfieldsofwarfare,wecancrackGermany andendthewarthisyear.’ Formonths,WashingtonremainedscepticalaboutAllenDulles’materialfromFritzKolbe,which seemedtoogoodtobetrue.TheOSSmanwascorrecttoemphasisethatonlytheGermanarmyhad thepowertoremoveHitler,andthatfearoftheSovietsdominatedallGermanperceptions,reporting on6December1943:‘ItispossiblydifficultforyouinWashingtontorealizetheextentofthereal apprehensionofRussiainthispartoftheworld.’Muchofhisinformationaboutthetensionsand powershiftswithintheNazihierarchywasaccurate,forinstanceaNovember1943reportthat Himmlernolongerthoughtthewarmilitarilywinnable,andthatSpeerwasnoweconomicsupremo. InJanuary1944hebegantotellWashingtonaboutGermanResistancegroups’hopesofkillingHitler. Forthemostpart,BernOSS’spoliticalreportingaboutconditionsinGermanywasreasonably sound,butDullesrevealedashakygraspofmilitarymatters–scarcelysurprisinginalawyer.Like manyothersecretwarriors,hewildlyoverratedthecapacityofguerrillamovements,andespecially oftheFrenchResistance,tomakeastrategiccontributiontotheadvanceoftheAlliedarmies,though hewascorrectinhisbittercriticismsoftheRooseveltadministrationforrejectingdeGaulleasthe legitimatestandard-bearerofFreeFrance. InthelaterwaryearstherewassurelyastrandofenvyintheattitudeofMI6andSOE,whichwere facedwiththeembarrassmentthatahostofEuropeansofallpoliticalhueswhowerepeddling informationorstrivingforinfluencesoughtoutDulles,nowthelocalAmericangrandee,in preferencetoBritishagents.HecabledWashingtonon30July1944,deploringBritishattemptsto claimownershipofFrenchandItalianpartisans:‘AmsorrytostatethattheBernZulu-SOEChief’s generalattitudeistotrytomonopolizerelationswithResistance.’Hedevotedmucheffortto compilinganddispatchingmaterialontheWehrmacht’sorderofbattle,thoughthiswasfarless accurateandcomprehensivethanwasderivedfromUltra.OnoneoccasionhereportedTirpitzsetto sailinninedays,thoughthegiantbattleshipwasthenunfitforsea.On29April1944heurged parachutingOSSagents,armsandequipmentintoPoWcamps,toempowertheirinmatestorise:‘A fewsuchoutbreaksbyprisonerswouldhaveagravepsychologicaleffectinGermany.’Herewasan exampleofthesortofsillinessthatsometimesovertookOSSandSOE–implementationofsucha planwouldhaveprovokedwholesaleNazimassacresofAlliedPoWs,fornomilitaryadvantage whatever. On19February1944,Dullessentalongdispatchoncemoreurgingtheimportanceofbuilding foundationsforadefeatedGermany:‘Theonlyrealquestiontodayiswhetherconstructive regeneratingforceswillcontrolanddirectthefateofEurope,orwhetherforcesofdisintegrationand anarchywillprevail.’HeurgedthattheWesternAlliesshouldimmediatelyembarkonacollaboration withtheGermanResistancetocreatealeft-of-centreBerlingovernment-in-waitingthatoffereda crediblealternativetocommunism.Theflawinallthiswasthatitignoredtoweringrealitiesonthe ground:theRussianswerestormingwestwards,anddoingmostofthehardfightingtodestroy Nazism.ThepolicyadoptedbytheBritishandAmericangovernments,offocusingonmilitary victoryfollowedbyanoccupationofGermany,wastheonlyrealisticcoursewhenanypolitical designembracingGermanfactionsmustopenadisastrousbreachwithMoscow. On7April1944DullesreportedthattheGermanopposition,ledbyGen.LudwigBeck,wasready tomoveagainstHitler.Headdedtendayslater:‘IdonotbelievethatanyableNazimilitaryofficials arepreparedasyettothrowopenthewesternfronttous.Idobelieve,however,thatthecollapseof Germanymightfollowaveryfewmonthsafterwards,ifwecouldgetasolidtoeholdintheWest.’He constantlypleadedwithWashingtontoauthorisehimtoofferpoliticalincentivestoanti-Hitler Germans–andwasrebuffed.On10July1944,tendaysbeforeStauffenberg’sbombexploded,he reportedbyradiophonetoWashington:‘Arevolution[insideGermany]isnottobeexpected;the peoplearetooapatheticandtoocloselysupervisedbythepolice.Acollapsecanonlycomeasthe Alliedtroopsarrive.Further,noBadogliodevelopmentislikelyhere.Theoppositionmovementsare notinanypositiontotakesuchastep.’Threedayslater,however,hebelatedlywarnedWashington thatsomebigGermandevelopmentmightbelooming,though‘Iamnotmakinganyforecastsof success’. InthesamemonthhespeculatedaboutwhetherthepassivityoftheU-boatfleetindicatedthatitwas beingheldinreadinesstoevacuatetheNazileadershiptoJapan.On9AugustheclaimedthatGen. StülpnagelinParishadattemptedsuicide.HereportedrealisticallyonthemoodinsideGermany followingthefailureoftheHitlerbombplot,sayingon19AugustthatGermansweretoo preoccupiedwithcopingwiththemiseriesandprivationsofdailylifetobecomepoliticallyinterested ortoconcernthemselveswithanythingmuchbeyondtheirpersonalhorizons.Hewrotelikewiseof theirattitudetoAlliedairbombardment:‘Theirreactiontotherepeatedraidsisratherlikethatofan injuredanimalheldatbaywithoutanyobviousmeansofescape…TheGermanscanseenowayout excepttocontinuethebattle.’ Hereportedon18January1945:‘NorwayandItalymaywellbethefirsttheatersfromwhich German[troop]withdrawalsstart.’HewasanenthusiasticbelieverinaNazilast-ditch‘redoubt’in southernGermanyinthespringof1945,andwaslessthanperceptivewhenhereportedina radiophonedispatchon21March1945:‘TheRussiansaretreatingtheGermansintheoccupied territoryonthewholeveryfairly…TheGermansfeelthattheRussiansaremakingasuccessoftheir occupation,andthereisagrowingfeelingthattheywillmakeagreatersuccessthantheEnglishand Americanswilloftheirs.’DullesledtheUScrusadeforAustriaanditspeopletobetreatedasHitler ’s victimsratherthanaccomplices,whichhelpstoexplainwhymostofAustria’smanywarcriminals escapedindictment. IndefenceofDulles,hegotnomorewrongthandidmostintelligenceofficersofallnationalities. Heprovidedausefulconduitforanti-NaziGermanstocommunicatewithWashington,evenifthe exchangesdidthemnopracticalgood.Perhapsthemostsignificantconsequenceofhiscontactswith theResistancewastofuelSovietparanoiaaboutthepossibilitythattheWesternAllieswouldmakea secretpeacewithGermany.TheRussians’Americanagentsinhighplaceskeptthemapprisedof Dulles’contactswithGermans–andofsomemeetingsthatwereproductsofthetraitors’over-fertile imaginations.On14June1944,forinstance,theWashingtonNKVDstationreportedtoMoscowthat DulleshadtoldtheStateDepartmentofapersonalvisittohimselfinBernbyGen.Waltervon BrauchitschoftheGermangeneralstaff,offeringpeacetermsonbehalfoftheWehrmachton conditionthatnoSoviettroopsshouldenterGermanterritory.CordellHull,theUSsecretaryofstate, hadrespondedtoDullesthat‘theAmericansarenotgoingtoconductanynegotiationswiththe Germanswithoutotherallies’.ThesamesignalalsodescribedDullesreceivingoverturesfrom prominentGermanswhoofferedtoevacuateWesternAllied-occupiedterritories,iftheywereleft freetocontinuethewaragainsttheUSSR. TherecordsuggeststhatDulles’emergencefromthewarasasupposedprinceamongspieswas undeserved.Hegotsomethingsright,becauseinformedGermansapproachedhim,asaprominent andaccessibleAmerican,ratherthanbecauseheperformedanynotablefeatofagentrecruitment,or displayednotablejudgementasananalyst.Gooddiplomaticreportingoftenachievedasmuchas,or morethan,spiesintheenemy’scamp.PavelSudoplatovwrote:‘Some80percentofintelligence informationonpoliticalmatterscomesnotfromagentsbutfromconfidentialcontacts.’Theseare morelikelytobemadeinembassiesorchancelleriesthanatsecretrendezvousonstreetcorners,and itisinterestingtocomparethetoneofDulles’reportingwithsomeofthedispatchesfromAllied ambassadorsinneutralcapitals.On30November1942,forinstance,theBritishambassadorin StockholmwrotetoLondon,reportingaconversationwithawell-connectedSwedewhohadjust returnedfromBerlin.OneofMoscow’smeninWhitehall,probablyDonaldMaclean,obligingly passedthistotheNKVD,sothatitwasalsoreadbyBeria. SirVictorMallet,theambassador,assertedthatallimportantGermanstrategicdecisionswerenow beingmadebyHitler,oftenagainstthestrongopinionofthearmy’sgeneralstaff.Opponentsofthe regimewithinthearmy‘couldundercertaincircumstancesbecomeleaderofanuprising’,but HimmlerandtheSSwereimmenselystrongand‘verydangerous’.IntheviewofMallet’sinformant, alongseriesofmajormilitarydefeatswouldberequiredbeforetheNaziregimebecamevulnerable. IntelligentGermanswerethoroughlyawarethattheWehrmachtfacedacrisisontheEasternFront(at Stalingrad):‘CiviliansinBerlincanimaginethehorrorsoftheRussianmassacresinGermanyif Germanylosesthewar.ItisthesefearsmorethananythingelsethatrestrainoppositiontotheNazis fromactivedemarches…Militaryandcivilianleadersoftheoppositionfullyrealizethatanytruce betweentheAlliesandHitleroranyonefromhiscliqueisimpossible.’ ThiswasasoundassessmentofthemoodinsideGermany,writtenbyanaccrediteddiplomat,andit ishardtoimaginehowanysecretagentorsignaldecryptcouldhaveimproveduponit.Mallet’s remarkscloselymatchedthoseoftheOSSfromBern.AllenDullescouldhavefunctionedjustas effectivelyhadhebeenUSambassador–hisprincipalsourceonHungary,forinstance,wasnospy butinsteadthelocalHungarianminister,BaronBakách-Bessenyey.TheOSSstationchiefwasa cleverNewYorklawyerwithlessunderstandingofinternationalaffairs,intelligence,war-makingor Europethanhesupposed.ItwasfortunatethattheadministrationinWashingtonignoredhispleasthat itshouldnegotiatewiththeGermanopposition:therewaspatheticallylittleofthis,anditspolitical expectationswereentirelyatoddswithreality.IftheAmericanshadopenedbilateraltalkswith Germansofanyhue,theRussianswouldhavebecomeevenmoreimpossibletodealwiththanthey werealready.Asitwas,theywhippedupastormwhenwithoutSovietconsentDullesarrangedterms forthesurrenderofGermantroopsinItalywithLt.Gen.KarlWolffon2May1945,threedays beforethegeneralcapitulation.Perhapsthemostremarkableaspectofthosenegotiationswasthat DulleswasabletoplaceanuncommonlycourageousOSSwireless-operator–aCzechnamedVáclav Hradecký,‘LittleWally’–inWolff’snorthItalianheadquarters,fromwhichhetransmittedtoBern forseveralweeks,andlivedtotellthetale. AftercompletinganexhaustivestudyoftheOSSwartimereportsfromBern,NealPetersenwrote: ‘Oneishard-pressedtoidentifyasingleexampleofaDullesreportofitselfhavingdirectimpactona top-levelpolicydecision.’LikesomuchotherOSSmaterial,mostofDulles’dispatchesdisappeared intothemawofwartimeWashingtonbureaucracy,withoutchangingheartsandmindseitheramong theUSchiefsofstafforattheWhiteHouse–whichwere,likeWinstonChurchill,muchmore receptivetotheirdailydoseofUltra. 12 Russia’sPartisans:TerrorisingBothSides On3July1941,Stalin’sfirstbroadcastappealtotheSovietpeoplesechoedChurchill’searlierclarion callstotheoccupiednationsofEurope:‘Conditionsmustbemadeunbearablefortheenemyandhis collaborators;theymustbepursuedandannihilatedwherevertheyare.’Whatfollowedacrossvast tractsoftheSovietempireinthenextthreeyearsbecamepartoftheheroiclegendofRussia’swar,a taleofitspeoplesunitedinresistingthebarbarousinvader.Contemporaryevidencenowavailable, however,tellsamorecomplicatedstory.From1943onwards,guerrillaoperationsinfluencedthe struggleontheEasternFrontmoresignificantlythananyothertheatreofwar.Partisanscouldoperate morereadilyinRussia’sforests,mountainsandsuchwildernessesasthePripyatmarshes,thanacross mostofWesternEurope.Stalinsufferednobourgeoissqueamishnessaboutcasualties,norabout collateraldamagetocivilians.Thetestimonyofmanywartimepartisansshowsthattheyconducted dualcampaignsofterror:againsttheAxis,andalsoagainstmillionsoftheirownpeoplewhofelt neitherloyaltytoStalin’spolity,norwillingnesstoriskalltorestoreit.Inthis,asinsomuchelse,the struggleintheEastattainedanextraordinaryferocity,andtheparticipantssufferedexperiencesfar bloodierthanthoseofWesternEurope. Intheearlywaryears,Stalin’spartisansfacedthesamedifficultiesastheircounterpartselsewhere: theylackedorganisation,arms,supplyaircraftandwirelesses.PavelSudoplatovclaimedinhis memoirsthattheNKVDhadmadeelaboratepreparationsforstay-behindoperationsinthewakeof Germanadvances.Thisisfalse.Inthe1930s,Stalinhaddismantledtheentireexistingnetworkof partisanbasesandcadresacrossthecountry,asathreattohisownauthority.Manyveteranguerrilla leadersofthecivilwarwereshotinthePurges.Throughoutthelatermonthsof1941Sudoplatovand hiscomradeswereobligedtostriveandscrabbletoimproviseintelligence-gatheringandpartisan groups.Theirearlyoperationswereshambolic,costly,futile.Almostallthemenconscriptedwere untrained,andmanywerealsounwilling.Theywereoftendeployedinregions–notablyUkraine– whoseinhabitantshadcelebratedliberationbytheGermansfromStalin’shatedtyranny.Partisans wereregardedbylocalpeopleasMoscow’screaturesratherthanaspatriots,asthreatstotheirhomes andcompetitorsfordesperatelyscarcefood.Moreover,untilStalingradtheGermanswereseenas winners,theSovietsaslosers.IntheBalticstates,duringthemonthsbefore‘Barbarossa’Beriahad conductedpurgesinwhichtensofthousandsofpeoplewereexecutedorshippedtothegulag,which explainswhysomanyLithuanians,EstoniansandLettsgarlandedthemenoftheWehrmacht.While Britain’sSOEmadenoattempttostimulatefull-scalerevoltinoccupiedEuropebetween1940and 1944,inthedesperatecircumstancesofembattledRussiathousandsofmenwerethrustinto operationsintheimmediatewakeof‘Barbarossa’.Russiawaspayingsodreadfulaforfeitthatthe partisans’murderouslossesvanishedunnoticedintothegreatcauldronofbloodsetbubblingby HitlerandStalin. Guerrillascanonlyswiminaseaoflocalsympathisers,toparaphraseMaoZhedong.InUkraine, focusofMoscow’sfirstclumsyeffortstopromoteguerrillawar,therewerefewsuchpeople.The localCommunistParty’ssecretaryreceivedareportfromCommissarVasilySergienko,detailing partisanoperationsinthefirstyearofwaronSovietsoil.TheNKVD,thisstated,claimedtohave established1,874groups,withatotalstrengthof29,307;ithaddispatched776agentsandcouriersto workwiththesebands.Yeton1May1942MoscowCentreacknowledgedjustthirty-sevengroupsas operationalinUkraine,withacombinedstrengthof1,918men.Whathadhappenedtotherest?Some surrenderedtotheGermansatthefirstopportunity,whileotherswerecapturedorkilled.Many simplyfadedbackintolocalcommunities,abandoningtheirmissions.Therewasnocoordination betweenrivalPartybodiesandintelligenceorganisations,eachofwhichcreateditsownlocalforces. Sergienkocomplainedinhis1942report:‘Responsibilityforinfiltratingpartisangroupsthroughthe enemy’sfrontisoftenentrustedtopeoplewhohaveabsolutelynoexperience…Partisangroupsare givencontradictoryinstructionsandtasks.’ TheNKVDandGRUstruggledtogainaccesstoscarceaircraft.Mattersbegantoimproveonlyin May1942,whenacentralstaffforallpartisanoperationswascreated,followedsoonafterwardsbya partisanair-transportorganisation,bothunderdirectPartycontrol.NKVDcellswereattachedtoall thegroups,mostofwhichnumberedbetweenfiftyandahundredmen.Armsandsuppliesremained chronicallyshort.TheworstthatGen.FranzHalder,Hitler ’scommanderintheEast,couldsayabout partisansin1942wasthattheyconstituted‘ratheranuisance’.Onlyintwoareasofnorth-eastern Ukrainewereguerrillasthenoperatingeffectively,andevenlaterinthewarthesurvivalofsuch bandsdemandedforestbases,wheretheGermansstruggledtolocateanddestroythem. Theleaderofonegroup,acomradenamedKovpak,dispatchedtoUkrainiancommissarNikita Khrushchevon5May1942areport,countersignedbyhisownband’scommissar,whichasserted baldlythatcivilians‘weredemoralizedbytheretreatoftheRedArmyandtheGermanreignof terror,whilecertainstrataofthepopulationandanumberofUkrainianvillageswerehappyaboutthe arrivalofoccupationtroopsandhostiletowardspartisansandtheSovietregime’.On21August1941 MikhailovKartashev,anNKVDagentinKiev,wrotetoSudoplatovinMoscow,paintingableak pictureofthechaosofpartisanoperations:‘DearPavelAnatolievich!Thisletterisaprivateonesince theissuesbelowarenotwithinmydirectcompetence.Idon’ttakepartintheoperationofourorgans inKiev…AlltheinformationbelowhasbeenobtainedwithoutreferencetoofficialsofthePeople’s Commissariat,andisthusstrictlytruthful…Itishardtosaywhoisperformingworst,butitisclear thattheworkofourorganisationsislessthanbrilliant.’Kartashevwentontodescribethefateofone 150-stronggroupestablishedinKharkov,whichwasorderedtocrossthefrontinBessarabia.Itsmen setforthwithoutguidesormaps,dressedinciviliancityclothes,carryingonlypistolsorrifles,and enoughofthosetoarmjusthalftheband.Theyhadnoorders,noradios,nopasswordsbywhichto re-enterSoviet-heldterritory.Likemostsuchparties,theywereneverheardfromagain.Kartashev continued:‘informationaboutthefateofpartisangroupsonlybecomesavailableifsurvivorsmakeit backthroughthelines’.Theylackedbriefingsaboutenemydeployments:‘Youhaveprobablyread reportsaboutinstanceswherepartisansattemptingtocrossthelinewere“drivenback”.Thisphraseis inherentlyfalsebecausethereisnocontinuousfront,onlyGermanconcentrations,andofcourse line-crossersbumpintothemiftheyhavenoideawheretheyare.’ Therewasablack-comicepisodeofthissortwhenacertainSergeantBondarenkowasguidinga partyintruckstoarendezvouswhereitsmenweretodismountandcrosstheenemylinesonfoot.A RedArmysentrywaveddowntheconvoytowarnthatonlyGermanslayinfront–andwasignored. Thepartisansdroveblithelyonuntiltheymetahailoffire,whichkilledtheircommanderandmost oftheparty.ThirtysurvivorsfledbacktotheSovietlines,withouttheirweaponsorvehicles.Another partywalkedintoaGermanmortarbarragewhichaccountedforseveralmen;thesurvivorsspent fivedayshidinginaswampbeforetricklingbacktotheSovietlines. TheNKVD’sKartashevcataloguedthepartisans’deficienciesofarmsandequipment:theyhad riflesforonly50percentoftheirstrength,andfortyroundsaman,whichtheywereobligedtocarry intheirpocketsorbootsforlackofbandoliersandpacks.Somehadnoammunitionatall.Onegroup arrivedfromKharkov,composedofhighly-motivatedandwell-armedPartycadres,whowere promptlydeployedtoguardthelocalNKVDheadquartersratherthantofight.Kartashevobserved witheringlythatofficialreportstoMoscownotmerelyfailedtoadmitthesefiascos,butpretendedthat partisanoperationswerebeingsuccessfullycarriedout.TheinstitutionalisedmendacityoftheSoviet systemwasunshakeable. Afewofficialreportsdidtellthetruth,however,suchasonedated21November1941,addressed toNikitaKhrushchev.ThisrecordedtheexperiencesofabattalionoftheNKVD’s1stPartisan RegimentinAugust,whenitwassurprisedbytheGermanswhilerestinginthevillageofOsintsy, nearZhitomit.Atwo-hourbattletookplaceinwhichthebattalioncommander,hischiefofstaffand commissarwerekilled.Justtwomensurvivedoutofahundred,toreturntotheSovietlineswiththe sorrytale.ThereporttoMoscowconcluded:‘Wemayassumethatthe1stBattalion’sfailurewas causedbythefollowing:anunsuitablespotchosenforahalt;lackofnecessaryreconnaissanceand poorsecuritywhichallowedtheGermanstoapproachunnoticedtowithin50metres;and,finally, possiblebetrayaloftheunitbytwopartisanswhohaddesertedontheeveningbeforethebattle (Levkovetsdoesnotknowtheirnames).DeputyPeople’sCommissarofInternalAffairsofUkrSSR, Savchenko.21November1941.’ YetanotherreporttoKhrushchev,dated24November1941andmarked‘TOPSECRET’,detailed thefateofagroupcommandedbyoneKhalyava,whoreturnedfromamission.Hehadsetforthwith twenty-fourmen,hand-pickedassupposedkeenPartyactivists,albeitlackingmilitaryexperience. Mostofthem,hesaid,surrenderedtothelocalGermanKommandaturinKrasnoarmeiskwithinhours ofthattown’soccupation,andbecamedriversfortheWehrmacht.Hehimselfreturnedalonetothe Russianlineson18November.Agroupofforty-sevenmensenttoKiev,thenstillinRussianhands, wasorderedtocrossthefrontandmakeforVinnitsaandBerichev,headedbyacommandernamed Rudchenko,who–unusually–wasgivenawirelesstransmitter.Withindays,Kievwasoverrunbythe Germans.ThenexttheNKVDheardofRudchenko,hehadbeenspottedsurrenderingtothe occupiers,alongwithmostofhismen.Theeyewitness,ayounglieutenantwholaterreachedRed Armypositionsfurthereast,saidthathewarnedthesupposedpartisanleaderthathewascommitting treason,butwasignored.Thereportconcludeddarkly:‘Measureshavebeentakentoverifythis information.DeputyPeople’sCommissarofInternalAffairsofUkrSSR,Savchenko.24November 1941.’ Intheaftermathofthewar,theSovietUnionidentifiedforglorificationseveralgroupswhich survivedformonthsinthecatacombsbeneaththeBlackSeacityofOdessa,whichwasoccupiedby Axisforcesfor907days:in1969thetunnelswereopenedasamuseumdubbed‘TheMemorialto PartisanGlory’.Theofficialnarrativedescribedhow,beforeOdessafellinOctober1941,local Komsomolmeetingswereheldtoplanstay-behindResistance.Laterveterans’testimony,however, toldinsteadofanorgyofdespairingdrunkenness,followedbyfist-fightsbetweenMoscowand OdessaNKVDmen.Inthelongmonthsthatfollowed,competingsecretservicegroupsfoughteach othermuchmoreenergeticallythantheyengagedtheGermans.OneMoscowofficer,Captain VladimirMolodstov,aformerminercapturedandexecutedbytheGermansinJuly1942,waslater madeaHerooftheSovietUnion.Followinghiscapture,however,arivalnamedLt.Kuznetsov,a memberoftheOdessaNKVD,disarmedandthenkilledallbutoneofMolodstov’smen,claimingthat theyhadbeenplottingagainsthim. On28AugustKuznetsovshotanothermanforstealingapieceofbread.Amonthlater,hekilled twomorefortakingfoodand‘lackofsexualdiscipline’,whateverthatmeant.Amonthlater, Kuznetsovhimself–who,ifnotunhinged,wasobviouslyabrute–wasshotbyoneofhisownmenin anundergroundrefugeknownas‘theMirrorFactory’.OnlythreeNKVDofficersthereafter survived,andtheirmentalconditionmusthavebeendire.Abramov,themanwhohadkilled Kuznetsov,urgedsurrender.Anotherofficerchoseinsteadtoleavethecatacombs,andspentthe remainingmonthsofOdessa’soccupationhidinginhiswife’sapartment.Afterthecity’sliberationhe claimedtohavekilledAbramov,butthatofficersomehowsurvived.Thelastofthethree,named Glushenko,alsolivedtoseeOdessaoverrunbytheRedArmy,butthenreturnedtothecatacombsfor someill-definedpurpose,andperishedwhenagrenadeexplodedinhishands.Thisaccountisriddled withinconsistenciesandunconvincingtestimony.Theonlycertaintyisthatthe‘partisangroup’ accomplishednothingsavetoendureasubterraneanordealthatkilledmostofthem. Thesamefatebefellanothersimilarparty,whosestoryisknownonlythroughanintelligence reporttotheprimeministerofRomania,Hitler ’sallyIonAntonescu,compiledon18April1942.It wasbasedoninterrogationsofcapturedsurvivorsfromthecatacombs,andhasaringofauthenticity. ThisRussiangroup,fortymennominatedbythelocalPartyhierarchy,wascommandedbytwo captains,FrolovandLemichik.On10September1941theywereorderedtopenetratetheRomanian sectoroftheAxisfront,butwerespottedandreturnedindisarraytoOdessa,reducedtoastrengthof eighteen.Astheenemyswepttowardsthecity,twelvetookrefugeinitscatacombs,whichwerehastily provisioned,wheretheyweresupposedlytoawaitopportunitiestocarryoutespionageandsabotage operations.OnedayinOctoberthisgroup,whichnowincludedtwowivesandwascommandedby AleksandrSoldatenko,descendedintotheirsecretrefugethroughanentranceat47DalnitskayaStreet. Itiseasytoimaginethetension,uncertaintiesandterrorsofthedaysandnightsthatfollowed, entombedbeneathacityinthehandsoftheenemy.Thepartywasheavilyarmed,buttowhatpurpose? ThreetimesinearlyNovemberonepartisan,LeonidCherney,riskedventuringabovegroundby night,inanattempttocontactawomancourier.Hefailed,andreturnedtoreportmerelythatthe occupierswereeverywhere.On13NovemberRomaniansecuritypolice,whohadbeenwarnedofthe partyfarbeneaththeirfeet,soughttopenetratethecatacombs.Afirefightfollowedinthedarkness, whichpersuadedtheRomaniansthatitwouldbeeasiertoimprisontheirfoesbysealingthe catacombs’entrances.Thereafter,notawordwasheardofSoldatenko’spartyuntilFebruary1942. Theirexperienceintheinterludewasamongthemoredreadfulofthewar. Severalpartisans,succumbingtodespairandhungerwhentheirprovisionsranout,demandedthat thegroupshouldascendintothecityandsurrender.Thispropositionwasrejectedoutofhandby Soldatenko.AmannamedByalikandhiswifeZhenya,prominentamongthoseclamouringfor surrenderandanywayvulnerableasnon-Partymembers,wereshot.Duringthedaysandweeksthat followed,theywerealsoeaten.Disputesandresentmentspersistedamongthesurvivors.On1 February1942,fourmensuccessfullyescapedthroughanimperfectlysealedexit,andwerethenrash enoughtomakefortheirownhomes.Threewerepromptlydenouncedbyneighboursandseizedby theRomanians,whileonemadegoodhisescape. Odessa’soccupiersnowpumpedgasandsmokeintothecatacombstoflushouttheremaining partisans.Thispromptedapanicunderground,andanewrevoltinwhichSoldatenkoandhiswife Elenawereshotdead.Whenescapeprovedimpossiblethethreesurvivorsreturnedtotheir undergroundlair,andsubsistedforseveraldaysbyeatingportionsoftheSoldatenkos.Then,atlast, allhopegone,thesedesperatemenmadetheirwaytothesurfaceandsurrendered.ARomanianpatrol venturedbelowandexploredthepartisans’refuge.TheyfoundthebonesoftheByaliks,togetherwith thehalf-eatencorpsesoftheSoldatenkos. IntheannalsofWesternEurope’sexperienceofthewar,themassacreofthepopulationofthe villageofOradour-sur-GlanebyGermantroopsinJune1944holdsaspecialplace,becausealthough thousandsofFrenchResistantsandhostageswerekilledbytheNazis,theextinctionofanentire communitywasauniqueoccurrence.IntheEast,however,suchthingsweredoneconstantlyby Hitler ’sforces.Fromtheearliestdaysof‘Barbarossa’hedecreeddreadfulreprisalsforanyactof civilianResistance.On23July1941heinstructedhiscommandersthattheyshouldcreatesucha reignofterroraswould‘causethepopulationtoloseallinterestininsubordination’.On16 Septemberhischiefofstaffquantifiedthis,decreeingatariffoffiftytoahundredexecutionsof hostagesforeveryGermandeathatthehandsofpartisans.Thepolicywasenthusiastically implementedbyErichvondemBach-Zelewski,whowouldachievespecialnotorietyforhisblooddrenched1944suppressionoftheWarsawRising.Nazirepressionwasforsometimesuccessful: acrosstwo-thirdsofoccupiedSovietterritorytherewasnosignificantpartisanactivity.Rearareasin thesouthernUSSR,wherethemajorGermanoperationsof1942tookplace,werenotablytranquil: thesteppesofferednorefugestoguerrillas.Here,onceagain,experienceinRussiamirroredthatof France,whereResistancewasstrongestinthecentralandsouthernwildernesses,leaststrategically importanttoHitler. InBelorussia,inamonthfollowingthekillingofjusttwoGermans,the707thInfantryDivision shot10,431people,mostofthemwomenandchildren.InJuneandJuly1942,SecondPanzerArmy conductedtwoanti-partisansweeps,codenamed‘Birdsong’and‘GreenWoodpecker ’,against partisansintheBryanskarea.Thefirstoperationinvolved5,500Germantroopsandendedwith claimsof3,000partisanskilled,woundedorcaptured.Mostofthesewere,however,merelylocal civilians,andBirdsongcosttheGermansfifty-eightkilledand130wounded.GreenWoodpecker farednobetter.ThereweredeadRussiansinplenty,tobesure,butmostpartisanssurvived.InArmy GroupCentre’srearareas,coveringsome90,000squarekilometres,inthefirstelevenmonthsof ‘Barbarossa’8,000allegedpartisanswerekilled–anumberfarinexcessofthetotalthenoperating intheregion,andonlyexplicablebyassumingmostvictimstohavebeencivilians–inexchangefor 1,094Germanfatalitiesupto10May1943.InJanuary1943,AGCentreclaimedtohavekilledan astoundingtotalof100,000‘bandits’.SuchreportsmakenonsenseoftheWehrmacht’sdenialsof complicityinNaziwarcrimes. OnemanifestationofescalatingpartisanactivitywasreportedbyMaj.Gen.Nagel,inspectorgeneralofoperationsforEconomicStaffEast,theinstitutionresponsibleforplunderingtheoccupied regionsoffoodandlivestock.Duringthesummerof1942hetoldBerlinthatithadbecometoo dangeroustosendpartiesintoforestsinArmyGroupCentre’ssectortocuttimberforrailway sleepers.Moreover,localGermancommanderswereunwillingtocontinuewholesaleseizuresof livestock,forfearofincreasingpartisansupportinlocalcommunities.Millionswhohadinitially acquiescedinGermanoccupation,thenbecomecowedbyrepression,hadnowbeguntobelievethat onlySovietvictorymightdeliverthemfromstarvationanddestitution.SixteenthArmyHQreported thatbetweenMayandJuly1942,thirtyattackshadbeenmadeonbridgesandeighty-fouronrailways initsarea,involvingdestructionoftwentylocomotivesand130wagons.InArmyGroupCentre’s sector,betweenJuneandDecember1942therewere1,183attacksonrailways,anaverageofsixa day. Theexistenceofthepartisanbandswasbrutishintheextreme.LiketheFrenchmaquis,they practisedbanditrytosupporttheirownexistenceswithatleastasmuchzealastheyfoughtthe Germans.OnedayinSeptember1942,agroupofstarvingmencrawledintoapotatofield,andbegan franticallyscrabblingintheearth.Oneofthem,namedKovpak,heardanoisebehindhimandturned toseeawomangazingcontemptuouslydownatthem.Shesaid,‘MyGod!MyGod!Hereyouare,big healthyguys–andreducedtostealingpotatoesfromus!’Manymenfroze,starved,wereshotin clasheswithrivalbandsorfacedsummaryexecutionforsomeallegedbreachofdiscipline.‘Weshot Kozhedubforfiringhisguntwicewhilehewasdrunk,causingpanicinthecamp,’wroteapartisan namedPopudrenkoinFebruary1942.‘Thiswasagooddecision.Intheeveningwehadanamateur concert,sangtoanaccordion,danced,andtoldfunnystories…ComradeBalabai[killed]one bastard,aforesterwhowasworkingfortheGermans.’Thestorywasthesameeverywhere.‘Inthe morningIreceivedareportthataformer[Soviet]prisonerofwarwhoservedinthe2ndCompany haddeserted,’scrawledapartisangroupleadernamedBalitskyon3August1943.‘Hewascaptured inthevillageofLipno…Havinglittletodiscusswiththisspy,ImerelypulledoutmyMauserand endedthisnobody’sexistencewithasingleshot.’ AlargeproportionoftheSovietfightersweremerefugitives,morethanafewofthemJews seekingarefugefromNazipersecution,ratherthanSovietpatriotscommittedtoarmedstruggle againsttheAxis.Aroundhalfofallpartisanswerelocalpeasants,forcedintoserviceatgunpoint. Everybandlivedindreadofbetrayal,andcollaboratorsrevealedtheirlocationstotheenemyasoften ashappenedtothemaquisardsofFrance.Casualtieswereappalling:whentheGermanslocatedand surroundedapartisansanctuary,itwasnotunusualforeverymaninagrouptoperish.Butwhen Moscow’swillwasserved,itwasthepartisanswhodidtheattacking.Popudrenkorecordedon27 February1942:‘WelearnedlastnightthatgrainwasbeingassembledfortheGermansinKlyusy.We sentthirtymenwhobroughtbackmorethan100poods,therestwasdistributedamongcollective farmers.’Afortnightlater:‘WeattackedaHungarianbattalionstationedinIvanovkavillage…First Companyattackedfrontally,Secondheldtheflank,ThirdandFourthgavefiresupport.Resultsofthe battle:killed92Hungariansamongthem4officers,64policemen.Capturedoneheavymachine-gun and2light,15,000cartridges,ananti-aircraftgun,103blankets,sevenrifles,onetransmitteretc.We havelosttenmenkilledandsevenwounded.’ItisreasonabletoguessthatmanyoftheHungarian deadwereshotafterbeingtakenprisoner,thecustomonbothsidesofpartisanwar. On18August1942HitlerissuedanewDirective,No.46,giving‘Guidelinesforanintensified fightagainsttheplagueofbanditryintheEast’.Forthefirsttime,thisproposedcarrotsaswellas sticksinthemanagementoftheoccupiedterritories:collaborationistcommunitieswouldreceive enhancedrations,andbeexcusedfromforcedlabour.Inreality,however,thisbelatedconcessionwas seldomobserved.AndonlytwomonthslaterHitlerissuedaneworder,statingthattheEastern partisanwarmustnowberecognisedas‘astruggleforthetotalextirpationofonesideortheother ’. Asubsequentgeneralorderof11November1942statedthat‘capturedbandits,unlessexceptionally …enlistedinourfightagainstthebands,aretobehangedorshot’.Germany’smodernPotsdam historianshavewritten:‘Theoccupyingpowerwasneitherwillingtocreatethepoliticalframework forpacificationnorabletoenforcesuchaconditionbymilitarymight.’ TheGermansultimatelydeployedaquarterofamillionmenforanti-partisanoperationsandrearareasecurityintheEast,whichrepresentedarealachievementforStalin,MoscowCentreandPavel Sudoplatov,whoprovidedtheNKVDagentsandwireless-operatorswhoservedwiththepartisans. MostoftheGermantroopsengagedinsecuritydutiesweremenunfitforfront-lineservice,butthey hadtobearmedandfed,andthusbecameasignificantdrainonHitler ’swareffort.During1943the partisans’fieldstrengthincreasedfrom130,000toaquarterofamillion.On28JulyAllenDullesin BernsignalledWashington,reportinghisBerlinsourcessayingthatpartisanswerenowmakinga majorimpactbehindtheEasternFront,seriouslydisruptingtheWehrmacht’slinesofcommunication. GermansigintofficersconsideredtheradiodisciplineofthepartisansbetterthanthatofSoviet regularunits,probablybecauseeverygroupknewthatitssurvivaldependedonoutwittingGerman locators.Intheautumnof1943amonthlyaverageof2,000telephonepolesandthreehundredcables werecutbyguerrillasbehindArmyGroupCentre’sfrontalone.Itsheadquartersintroducedaspecial ‘partisanwarning’radiochannel,broadcastingtoallunits. Wehrmacht‘specialintelligencegroups’handledsecurityandinterrogationintheGermanrear areas,amongtheugliestaspectsoftheanti-partisanwar.ABritishfileonsomeofthepersonalities involved,mostlybasedonUltramaterial,includedsuchfiguresasVladimirBedrov:‘Formerly employedbytheNKVDinLeningrad.DesertedtotheGermans.Employedasaninterpreterand translator.Extremelybrutaltowardsprisoners.DesertedinFebruary1944andarrestedinEstonia. SenttoaconcentrationcampinEasternGermanyforpeoplewhoknowtoomuch.’Anotherman, SergeantBohme,camefromRiga,hadlivedinVienna,spokefluentRussianandEnglish,‘ranan agentnetworkrecruitedfromRussiaPWandthreeorfourwomen’.FieldPoliceInspectorKarl BrenkerwasdescribedinhisBritishdossieras‘guiltyofeveryconceivablecrimeagainsttheRussian population.Averitablebeast.Carriedoutexecutionshimself.Particularlybrutaltowardswomen. Decoratedwiththegoldenanti-partisanbadge.’ TheNKVD’sFourthDirectoratewasresponsiblefordirectingwhatbecameknownas‘theRailway War ’becauseofitsemphasisonhittingGermancommunications.‘Anenemytrainwasblownupat1 a.m.,’apartisanleadernamedBalitskywroteinhisdiaryfor25August1943.‘Itconsistedofthirtyeightwagonsandwasheadingtowardsthefront.Wetookpartofitsloadandburnedtherest.[Most of]thetrain’sescortwerekilledandfivecaptured,afterputtingupheavyresistanceinwhichfifteen partisanswerewounded.’TheattackonGermanEasternFrontcommunicationsduringtheRussians’ hugesummer1944‘Bagration’offensivemademoreimpactonthemainbattlefrontthandidthatof theResistanceinFranceinsupportofD-Day.TheSovietsatlasthadtheresourcestoorchestrate majoroperationsbehindthelinesaswellasagainsttheGermanarmies.Theydeployed‘strategic intelligencesections’,eighttotwelvestrong,operatingtentosixtymilesbeyondthefront,andwere alsoabletosustainreasonablyregularairdropstohundredsofpartisangroups.Noreliablebalance sheetispossible,thoughitseemsreasonabletoassumethat–asineveryotheraspectofthewarinthe East–thepartisancampaigncosttheRussiansfarmorepeoplethantheGermans.Butinthelasttwo yearsofthewartheymadeadifference.InthewordsofaGermangeneral,partisansbecame ‘formidable,well-trainedunits…aplaguewithwhichallrear-areaheadquarters,supply, transportationandsignalunitshadtocontendeveryday’. Between1941and1945,SudoplatovclaimedinhismemoirsthattheNKVDdispatchedatotalof 212teamstoleadguerrillagroups,and7,316agentsandwireless-operatorstoworkbehindenemy lines.ItssabotageschoolstrainedathousandmenfortheRedArmy,andanother3,500foritsown operations.Hesuggestedthat2,222‘operationalcombatgroups’servedbehindthefrontinthecourse ofthewar.TheSovietofficialhistoryprofessedthatpartisanswereresponsibleforkilling137,000 Germans–whichmustbeanabsurdlyexaggeratedfigure–including2,045allegedcollaboratorsand eighty-sevenseniorNaziofficialsexplicitlytargetedforassassination.TheSovietUnionafterthewar producedarollofhonourofheroesofpartisanoperations,ledbysuchnamesasKuznetsov, Medvedev,Prokupuk,Vaopshashov,Karasyov,Mirkovsky.Kuznetsov–evenlessappropriately codenamedthanmostwartimeagentsas‘Fluff’–wasanNKVDmanofstrikingblondgoodlooks. Bornin1911,beforethewarhehadservedtheLubyankabysharingwithforeigndiplomatsseveral Bolshoiballetstarsaslovers.HehadgrownupinGerman-speakingSiberia,andthuswasableto passhimselfoffasaWehrmachtofficer,‘OberleutnantPaulZibert’,operatingbehindenemylines.In thisroleheassassinatedseveralprominentGermans.HewasnamedaHerooftheSovietUnionafter beingkilledbyUkrainiannationalistswhiletryingtocrossbacktotheRedArmy’slinesin1944. FromStalin’sperspective,themostimportantachievementofRussia’sguerrillaswastosustaina semblanceofSovietauthorityinregionsfarbehindthefront,andtocreateapropagandalegendof nationalunityagainsttheinvader.Inreality,theoccupiedareasoftheSovietUnionspawnedasmany differentresponsestoHitler–asimilarquotientofResisters,amatchingproportionofcollaborators –asdidWesternEurope.TheconsequencewasthatMoscowexactedaterribleretributionfromthose who,followingtheGermanretreat,weredeemedtohavedonelessthantheirdutytotheMotherland. In1943BeriareportedthattheNKVDhadarrestedanddetainedforinterrogation931,549suspectsin territoriesliberatedbytheRedArmy.Ofthese,hesaid,80,296hadbeen‘unmaskedasspies,traitors, deserters,banditsandcriminalelements’. ManypartisangroupskilledmoreRussianpeoplethanGermans,withthedeliberatepurposeof makingthemmorefearfulofthewrathofStalinthanthatofHitler.AFebruary1942reportbythe commanderoftheKopenkingroup,operatinginPoltavaoblast,meritsquotationatlength,not becauseitisunusual,butbecausetherearemanyotherslikeitindeclassifiedarchives,marked‘TOP SECRET’: Idiscoveredbyinterviewinglocal[Party]activistsinOstanovkithatthreevillagers,includingthecollectivefarmforeman,were loyaltowardstheGermansandbetrayedourpeople.Thesethreepersonswerearrestedandtakentotheforest3–4kmfrom Postanovkiwhereweshotthem.Atdawnon30October1941,thedetachmentreachedKhoroshkisettlement,andspentthedaylight hoursinaschool.Newmembersofthedetachmenttooktheoath.Werestockedwithsuppliesfromthecollectivefarm’sreserves, andonecartwastakentocarrythemachine-guns.IlearnedfromlocalactiviststhattheGermanshadappointedtheformerlocal schoolteacherstarosta[villagehead]inKhoroshki.Wetookhimwithuswhenleavingthevillageandshothimafterdrivingfor3 km…InCherevkiwearrestedthenewlyappointedstarostaandanothermansympathetictotheGermans.Weshotboth. InBolshayaObukhovka…wearrestedandshottwostarostas,fivepersonsrecruitedbytheGermanintelligence,seventeen peopleassociatedwiththechurch,andthreedeserters.AllfivepersonsrecruitedbyGestapowere14–19yearsold.Accordingto thecommanderoftheMirgorodpartisandetachmentcomradeAndreev,sixlocalsfromObukhovkaweresupportingtheGermans.I sentagrouptoarrestthesesixpersons,whowereafterwardsshot. AccordingtotheinformationofcomradesIvashchenkoandAndreev,afamilywithfoursonslivinginBolshayaObukhovkawere producinganddistributingareligiousleaflet[whichstated]:‘Everyonewhofindsthisshouldwritetenmoreandgivethemtopeople. PrayfortheGermans,ourliberators.GodhassavedusfromJewsandcommunists.’Agroupofsixpartisansweresentto[the village]ledbycomradeTereshchenko.Theycametothe[evangelists’]houseandaskedthemtoopenthedoor,buttheoccupants didnotobey,insteadbarringthedoorsandwindowswithwoodenbeams.Afterwaitingfortwohours,Tereshchenkoaskedfor permissiontobreakdownthedoor…Inthemorning,thefatherandfoursonsweretakenandshotintheforest.Ihaveestablished byquestioningthelocalsthatthree[Red]ArmymenhavebeenlivinginBolshayaObukhovkaforoveramonth.Iarrestedthem withhelpfromlocalpartisans.Questioningthemrevealedthattheyhadgotmarriedandhadnointentionofreturningtothefront.I shotthesethreemenasdesertersandtraitorstotheirmotherland. AccordingtotheinformationfromcomradesIvashchenko,AndreevandlocalactivistsinthevillagePanasovka,aformerkulak wasappointedthestarostathere.Isentagrouptoshoothimandhisfamily,asweknewthathiswife,daughterandmotherwere activeinspreadingunpatrioticrumours,suchasthattheSovietregimeisgoneforever,andthatGermanauthorityistheonlyauthentic one…Theirpropertywasconfiscatedforpartisanuse.AccordingtoinformationreceivedfromlocalpeopleinOlefirovka,the collectivefarm’sagronomist,whohadbeenappointedvillagechief,refusedtoissuegrain,sayingthattheSovietregimewasno more,andtheGermansneededit.IsentcomradeKaminyartoshoot[themanandhiswife]anddistributearoundsixtytonsofgrain amongthecollectivefarmers. Thisreportcoveredthreemonths’activitybyasinglegroup,andsuchcampaignsofterrorwere takingplaceacrosstheentirewesternSovietUnionoccupiedbytheGermans,incompetitionwith thoseoftheNazis,andlikewiseresponsibleforahostofdeaths. TheNKVDsoughttoexercisefarmorerigorouscontrolofpartisanoperationsthandidSOEor OSS,becauseitwasconductingastruggleinwhatthenpassedforitsownhomeland.Inoneimportant respect,theSovietsenjoyedanadvantageovertheBritishandAmericansinpromotingguerrillawar. IfChurchillwassometimescallousaboutthehumancostof‘settingEuropeablaze’,Stalinwas unfailinglyso.Hisindifferencetolossesamongthefighters,andtoconsequencesforthecivilian population,renderedthepartisancampaignoneofthedarkestmanifestationsoftheKremlin’s commitmentto‘absolutewar ’. 13 IslandsintheStorm 1 TH EA BW EH R ’ S I R I S H J I G Manyofthenationsinvolvedinthewarwererivenbyinternalfactionalstruggles,sometimestothe death,whichpersistedthroughouttheyearsinwhichtheAlliesgrappledwiththeAxis.Thiswastrue ofChina,France,Italy,Greece,Yugoslavia,Burma,India,SouthAfrica,Canada,FrenchIndochina andtheDutchEastIndies,tonameonlyafew.Themajorbelligerentsthusfoundthemselvesstriving toinducelocalactiviststodirecttheirfire–sometimesliterally–attheothersideintheglobal struggle,ratherthanattheirowncompatriots.Thisoftenprovedmoredifficultthancalmingrival wolfpacks. Irelandoccupiedamarginalplaceintheglobalstruggle,butbothsidescherishedmirror apprehensionslestitshouldbecomeahavenfortheirfoes.TheIrishFreeState,orEire,hadachieved aqualifiedindependencefromBritainlessthantwentyyearsbeforewarbrokeout.Tothechagrinof nationalists,sixcountiesofpredominantlyProtestantUlsterremainedpartoftheUnitedKingdom. Memoriesoftheugly1916–21struggletoexpeltheBritishremainedraw.ThoughEirewasstillin namepartoftheBritishCommonwealth,throughoutthewarprimeministerÉamondeValera espousedastubbornneutrality,resistingallblandishmentstojointheAlliedcauseevenwhen America,Ireland’swarmestfriend,becameabelligerent.YetwhiledeValeradefiedthewrathof WinstonChurchill,onwhomtheIrishdependedfortheirsubsistence,hewasalsoobligedtocombat domesticfoes.Therumpoftheso-calledIrishRepublicanArmy,madeillegalinEirein1936, remainedfanaticallyopposedtotheisland’spartition,andtothesettlementwithBritain.IRAterrorists sustainedacampaignofsabotageandmurderagainsttheBritish–in1939therewereextensive bombingsonthemainland–andalsodefiedtheDublingovernment. Attheoutbreakofwar,theGermansidentifiedIrelandasfertilesoil,andtheBritishagreed.Latein September1939MI6deliveredaluridlysensationalistreportonconditionsinEire,claimingthat‘an attemptatrevolutionbytheIRAdoesnotappeartobeoutofthequestion’.AGerman-ownedhotelat InverinDonegalbecameafocusofBritishconcern,becauseHitler ’sembassystaffsometimesstayed there–thoughsodidBritishofficers,includingyoungLt.PhilipMountbatten,RN.FromBerlin’s viewpointtherewaslittlemeritinintelligence-gathering,becauseIrelandharbourednosignificant militarysecrets,andtherewereonly318Germanand149Italianresidentsinthewholeislandto provideexpatriatesupport.TheAbwehrremainednonethelessconvincedthatiftheundergroundIRA couldbepersuadedtoresumeitscampaignofsabotageagainstmilitarytargetsintheBritishNorth andonthemainland,Berlinwouldprofit.Thus,between1939and1943aprocessionofAbwehr emissariesstrovetolinkarmswiththeterroristsagainsttheircommonfoe. ApervasivestrandinallGermany’sIrishoperationswasanawesomeignoranceofthecountry, muchgreaterthanthatoftheBritishaboutsay,Albania.Berlin’sfirstagent,dispatchedinFebruary 1939beforehostilitiesbegan,wasoneOscarPfaus,whowasbriefedaheadofhisdeparturebya CelticfolkloreenthusiastnamedFranzFromme,whoboredtheagenthalftodeath.Pfaus,having travelledtoDublinviaHarwich,presentedhimselftothehard-drinking‘General’EoinO’Duffy, leaderofIreland’sfascistBlueshirts,spiritualalliesoftheNazis.CouldO’Duffyputhimintouch withtheIRA?SincetheBlueshirtsandtheRepublicansrepresentedbitterlyopposedinterests,this suggestionoutragedthe‘general’.ButPfauseventuallycontrivedtomeettheIRAArmyCouncil,and inthebesttraditionofstagespiestoreupapoundnoteandpresentedonehalftotheRepublicans,so thatwhentheysentarepresentativetoGermanytodiscussarmsshipments,hemightidentifyhimself. ThenPfauswenthome. TheIRAdecidedtopursuetheGermanoffer,anddispatchedasitsnegotiatorJimO’Donovan,who tookaboattoHamburgaccompaniedbyhiswife.Ontheirarrival,Germancustomsdiscoveredthat MrsO’Donovanhadconcealedaboutherpersonseveralcartonsofcigarettes,andsubjectedhertoa robuststrip-search.Thehigh-mindedO’Donovanexplodedwithrage:thecoupledepartedhomein dudgeon,withoutanyguns.Duringthemonthsthatfollowed,theAbwehrbecameincreasingly exasperatedbywhatitconsideredtheirresponsiblebehaviouroftheIRA,whichattackedEnglish cinemas,phonekiosksandletterboxesinafashionthatcontributednothingtoGermanvictory,norto Irishunification.InJanuary1940,whentheRepublicansstagedaspectaculararmsraidontheIrish army’smagazineatPhoenixPark,theexasperateddeValeraroundedupeveryIRAmanhis policemencouldcatch,andintroducedinternmentwithouttrial.IftheprimeministerhatedtheBritish, henowdislikedhiserstwhilefellow-freedomfightersalmostasmuch.ThePhoenixParkraidwasa turningpoint,becauseitmadeIreland’sgovernmentexplicitfoesofGermany’sRepublicanallies. TheAbwehrnowdispatchedanewagent,toinstilsomeTeutonicdisciplineintoIRAoperations. ErnstWeber-DrohlwasadiminutiveAustrian,alreadyoversixty,whohadforgedanincongruous careerasacircusstrongman.HissolequalificationtorepresentHitlerwasthathehadfatheredtwo childrenbyanIrishgirl.JustbeforehesetoutbyU-boatfortheEmeraldIsle,hisintendedwirelessoperatoravowedsuchaviolentdislikeforDrohlthatherefusedtoaccompanyhim.InMarch1940 thelittlestrongmanthusfoundhimselfaloneashepaddledadinghythroughdarknessandheavysurf totheshore,clutchingawirelesstransmitterandabundleofmoney.Therubberboatcapsized,theset waslost,andabedraggledspyflounderedashoreandmadehiswaytoDublin. TherehepresentedhimselfatthehouseofJimO’Donovan,whowaivedthememoryofthe Hamburgcustomshumiliationandbecamehistemporaryhost.Drohldeliveredamessageaddressed totheIRACouncilandsignedbyhimself,ofwhichthemostsignificantpassageread:‘ThePfalzgraf SectionveryurgentlyrequestsitsIrishfriendsandIRAmemberstobesogoodastomake considerablybettereffortstocarryoutthe[Abwehr ’s]S-plan…andtobemoreeffectualagainst militaryasopposedtocivilianobjectives.’TheAustrianaddedanapology:insteadofhandingoverto thesecretarmyUS$15,100entrustedtohimbyBerlin,theamountwas$600short,becauseheneeded cashhimself.Shortlyafterwards,whilestayinginaDublinhotelhewasarrestedbythepoliceand chargedwithenteringIrelandillegally.IncourttheagentclaimedthathehadcometoIrelandmerely toseekouthischildren–hiswifewasinNuremberg.TheIrishTimesreported:‘Weber-Drohl’s lawyersaidthattheaccusedhadhadnoevilintentionswhenhesteppedontoIrishsoil.Rather,the motiveswhichhadoccasionedhiscourseofactionwereextremelypraiseworthy.’Although dischargedafterpayinga£3fine,hewasalmostimmediatelyre-arrestedandinterned.When eventuallyreleasedtheAbwehr ’sagentstayedinIreland,ekingalivinginhisoldcircusrole,having lostinterestinservingtheFatherland. TheGermanembassynowurgedBerlinthatNaziagentsshouldhavenofurthertrafficwiththe IRA,whichmerelyworsenedrelationswiththeIrishgovernment.YettheAbwehr ’sfascinationwith exploitingGermany’senemies’enemiesasfriendsremainedundimmed.Athirty-five-year-old politicalsciencelecturerandardentNazi,DrEdmundVeesenmayer,wasappointed‘SpecialAdviser Ireland’.TheAbwehrconsultedwithFrancisStuart,anintellectualfanaticallycommittedtothe nationalistcause,whoturnedupinBerlininthemidstofaworldwartolectureonAnglo-Irish literature.AnIRAmannamedStephenHeldalsoarrivedviaBelgiuminApril1940,andpresentedthe IrishhalfofOscarPfaus’stornpoundnote.HeldadvancedanimaginativeproposalthattheGerman armyshouldeffectanamphibiouslandingnearDerry,tooccupyBritishUlster,thoughheofferedno adviceabouthowtheRoyalNavy’sobjectionstosuchaventuremightbeovercome.Inthefollowing month,IRAchiefofstaffSeanRussellalsoreachedtheNazicapital,havingtravelledfromNewYork viaGenoa.AllthesemenurgedtheGermanstoseizeahistoricopportunity. TheAbwehr ’snextemissarywasHermannGörtz–thebikerwhohadspiedhiswayintoBrixton prisonbackin1936.Itseemedanextraordinarychoice,todispatchtoIrelandamiddle-agedlawyer whohadneverseentheplaceinhislife,butwitnessesattheairfieldfromwhichhisHeinkelIII bombersetforthontheeveningof4May1940wereimpressedbyhischeerfulnessandeven insouciance.HehadtrainedwithNo.800ConstructionDemonstrationBattalion,thecommandounit whichlaterbecametheBrandenburgRegiment,andnurturedheroicaspirations.Görtzparachuted fromthenightskywithoutaccidentbutlandednearBallivor,Co.Meath,seventymilesfromhis intendeddropzone.Duringthedescenthelostbothhiswirelesssetandthespadewithwhichhe intendedtoburyhisparachute. Hedumpedhisflyingsuit,toreuphismapsandthrewthefragmentsinariver,thenstartedwalking southinsearchofMrsIseultStuart,wifeoftheRepublicanliterarylecturerinBerlin.Hewasnow cladinbreeches,ridingboots,pulloverandaberet,andalsocarriedhisWorldWarIcampaign medals,asomewhatindiscreetgestureforasecretagent.Afteralong,hardtrekhereachedMrs Stuart’sdooratLaraghCastle,justwestofDublin.ShesummonedJimO’Donovan,whodroveto collectthevisitor.Görtzwrotelater:‘ThenIcametoDublinwhereImetsomepleasantpeoplewho neitherknewnorwantedtoknowanythingaboutmeandImovedaroundfreely.’Butthespywas broughtfacetofacewiththechaoticloyaltiesofIrelandwhenhemetfouryoungRepublicanswho demandedthecashhehadbroughtfromGermany,andmenacedhimforhalfanhourbeforehewas takentothehouseoftheIRA’sStephenHeld. On7May1940,inthemidstofDublinanIRAgangsoughttoseizeacouriercarrying correspondencetoSirJohnMaffey,Britain’srepresentativeinIreland.Thispromptedashoot-out betweenthegunmenandthepolice,andinfuriatedtheIrishgovernment.HermannGörtzventedonhis hostsapassionateharangueabouttheirresponsibilityofsuchconduct;itwasobviousthattheIrish authoritieswouldnowharrytheterrorists.TheGermanwasfearfulofbeingimprisonedand convictedasamerespy,ratherthan–ashesawhimself–acolour-bearerforhisnation’sallconqueringarmedforces.HebulliedtheIRAintomountingasearchfortheLuftwaffeuniformhe haddumped.Whentheyunsurprisinglyfailedtofindthis,hedemandedthatatailorshouldbefound whocouldmakehimanother. Onthenightof22Maytheinevitablehappened:policeraidedtheHelds’house.TheymissedGörtz butfoundhisparachute,togetherwithcodebooks,informationonIrishmilitaryinstallations,anda thickwadofcurrency.TheyarrestedStephenHeldandIseultStuart,thoughthelatterwasswiftly released.Görtz’snextmovementsremainuncertain.Helaterclaimedtohaveescapedthepolice dragnetandtakenrefugeintheWicklowmountains,wherehesufferedmuchfromhungerandrain, butthisversionisdisputed.Allthatisassuredisthatthroughthemonthsthatfollowedseveral women,impassionedRepublicans,shelteredhiminDublin,underanaliasas‘MrRobinson’.He dispatchedreportstohisemployersthroughseamensailingtotheContinent,noneofwhichever reachedBerlin,andwhichwouldhavedonelittlegoodtotheAbwehriftheyhad.Thislonely, unhappy,culturedandfranklypitiablefigurebecamesodesperatetogethomethathestroveinvain tobuyaboatinwhichtosailthere. TheGermanambassadorinDublin,DrHempel,saidcrosslythatheassumedtheGörtzsagawasa Britishplot,designedtodragIrelandintothewarontheAlliedside;theDublingovernmentwas furiousthatBerlinwascollaboratingwithitsterroristenemiesoftheIRA.YetstilltheAbwehr refusedtogiveup.AsplanningadvancedforOperation‘Sealion’,aninvasionofBritain,Berlin becamedesperatetodeployagentsinIreland,incasetheislandbecamestrategicallyimportant.In June1940,twomoreagentsofAbwehr1’sHamburgsectionweredispatched.WalterSimonwas anotherremarkablyelderlycandidateforpartisanwar,fifty-eight,aGermanseamanwhohadspent theFirstWorldWarinanAustralianinternmentcamp.LikeGörtz,hewasaveteranofanearlier unsuccessfulespionagemission:in1938,whilereconnoitringBritisharmamentfactoriesand airfields,hemetsomeWelshnationalistswhoclaimedawillingnesstoserveGermany,andgaveeach £20andaRotterdammailingaddress.InFebruary1939hewasarrestedatTonbridge,imprisoned, andinAugustsummarilydeported.Itmightbeexpectedthatthisexperiencewouldhavedimmed Simon’senthusiasmforsecretwar,butnowheacceptedtheidentitydocumentsofCarlAnderson,a Swedish-bornAustralian,andsetforthforIreland.HewastoldtostayawayfromtheIRAand communicatewithBerlinthroughacodebasedonthefirstverseofSchiller ’s‘DasLiedevonder Glocke’,whichhehadlearnedbyheart. Onthenightof12June,aU-boatstoleintoDinglebayandlandedSimon,whoburiedhiswireless setandheadedforDublin.Hewasquicklyspotted,trailedfromTraleeandarrested.Hispossessionof alargewadofcashwasincriminatingenough,butheknewhisfatewassealedwhenhiswirelessset wasalsoproducedincourt.CommittedtoMountjoyprison,hewaspromptlyaccostedbyastartled prisonerwhoexclaimed,‘Areyouheretoo?’Simonripostedangrily,‘Idiot!’Thetwomenwerenot supposedtoknoweachother,but‘PaddyMitchell’wasWillyPreetz,theAbwehr ’ssecondagent,who hadbeenlandedseparatelyonthesamemission.TheBritishtippedoffDublinthatSimonwasa knownGermanagent,andthetwomensettleddownforalongwarbehindbars. AndstillAbwehrbunglerskeptcoming:theGermansconvincedthemselvesthatBretons,fellowCelticnationalists,mightbewovenintotheirIrishnarrative.InJuly1940aBretonhelmsmansailed thethirty-six-footyachtSoizictoIrelandbearingthreespies–DieterGaertner,HerbtTributhand HenryObed–allcarryingpapersasSouthAfricanstudents.Theirmissionwascodenamed‘Lobster I’,buttheagentswerefarfrombeingmarinecreatures,spentthevoyageprostratewithsea-sickness, andwereimmediatelydetainedonlanding.On8August,attheheightoftheBattleofBritainaU-boat sailedfromFrancecarryingSeanRussell,theIRA’schiefofstaff,togetherwithFrankRyan,aleftwingveteranoftheSpanishCivilWar.AboutahundredmileswestofGalway,Russellbecame violentlyill,expired,andwasburiedatsea.RyanthereuponchosetoreturntoBerlin,whereevery kindofdarksuspicionarose,asitsoondidalsoinDublin.HadRussellbeenpoisoned?Intruthhe wasalmostcertainlythevictimofaburstgastriculcer. TheGermans’nextagentwasHelmutClissman,whoatleasthadtheadvantagesofknowingthe countryandbeingmarriedtoanIrishwife.TherewasnoU-boatforClissman,however.Hispassage wasentrustedinsteadtoahighlyexperiencedsailor,ChristianNissen,aboardacutternamedtheAnni Braz-Bihen.ClissmanhadreceivedtrainingwiththeBrandenburgers,andwasaccompaniedbya wireless-operator.AlltheGermans’preparationswereconfounded,however,whenthecuttercollided withathree-dayAtlanticgale,gustingtoForce10.Theenginebrokedown;thecrewprovedgrossly incompetent.NisseneventuallydecidedtotakehisexhaustedanddisaffectedchargesbacktoBrest, wheretheyarrivedinSeptember. Intheautumnof1940HermannGörtzfoundhimselfreceivingdiscreetvisitsinhissecrethavens fromallmannerofIrishmen,prominentpoliticiansamongthem,whowereeagertoforgelinkswith arepresentativeofthenationthatlookedsettosecuremasteryofEurope.TheGermanagent imploredhisIRAhoststomaketheirpeacewithdeValera,thoughhehadbynowrealisedthat statesmanshipwasnotamongtheirskills.Hewrotebitterly:‘Nothingmorethanweakeningintrigues andexchangesoffirewiththepolicewereachievedinsteadofbattlewiththeenemy,whichtheyhad promised.’StephenHayeshadsucceededRussellasIRAchiefofstaff,andGörtzrebukedJack McNeela,hisADC:‘YouknowhowtodieforIreland,buthowtofightforityouhavenotthe slightestidea!’ AgrumpyIrishgovernessnamedMrsDalywaspersuadedinNovember1940tobecomea passengerontheneutralJapaneseshipFushimiMaru,sentfromSpaintoevacuateahandfulof JapanesenationalsfromDublin.InadditiontocarryingacodebookforHermannGörtzhiddeninan alarmclockandmessagessecretedinherunderwear,shewasalsonominatedofficialcourierforthe IrishambassadorinMadrid.GörtzeventuallyreceivedMrsDaly’smessages,whichrevealedthe Abwehr ’sconfusionabouthowbesttoactinthewinterof1940–41,whenathreatofBritishinvasion seemedtoloomoverIreland.InDecember,theIrisharmy’sGeneralHugoMacNeillheldtalkswith HenningThomsen,the‘struttingNazi’whoservedascounsellorattheGermanembassy,aboutsucha contingency.TheBlueshirts’O’Duffywasalsopresent–aferventhateroftheBritishwhoaskedthat ifChurchilldidinvade,theGermansshouldparachuteweaponscapturedontheContinenttoarmIrish Resistance. BerlinofferedapromisethatIrishportsweresafefromLuftwaffebombsunlessoruntiltheBritish seizedthem.Görtzsomehowgotholdofawirelessset,andpersuadedAnthonyDeery,anIRA memberwhohadadayjobasaDundalkpostofficeradiotechnician,todispatchhismessages.This Deerydid,untilcaughtbythepoliceearlyin1942andsentencedtofiveyears’imprisonment.Inthe interval,Görtz’sdispatchesdidlittleservicetotheNaziwareffort,formostmerelylamentedhisown troubles. TheAbwehr ’snextattempttoplaceanagentinIrelandtookplaceon21March1941,whena HeinkelIIItookofffromAmsterdam’sSchipholairportcarryinginitsbombbaytwenty-nine-yearoldSgtGuntherSchütz.ThesergeanthaddonesomeamateurespionagewhileattendingtheGerman CommercialSchoolinLondonin1938.Hehadbeensecondedfromwartimeserviceintheartillery toservetheAbwehr,briefedtotransmitweatherandshippingreports,andespeciallyinformation abouttheBelfastshipyards.Hehadbeentrainedinmeteorology,andcarriedamicroscopewithwhich tocreateandreadmicrodotmessages.AswellasacopyofanEnglishnovelentitledJustaGirlas keytohiscoding,togetherwith3,000genuineUSdollarsandathousandEnglishpoundswhichhe soondiscoveredwereforged,hecarriedaSouthAfricanpassportinthenameofHansMarchner, alongwithabottleofcognacandasalamitosolacehisfive-hoursojourninthebellyoftheHeinkel. Schützleaptfromtheplaneintobrightmoonlight6,500feetaboveIreland,andwasknocked unconsciousbytheforceofhislanding.Awakingwithanosebleedtofindhimselfbeingstudiedwith interestbyalocalman,heburiedhisparachuteandflying-suit,andstartedwalking.Forhourshedid notdareaccostanybody,butwasfinallydriventoaskthewaytoDublin.Itwassixtymilesaway,he learned–hehadbeendroppedinCo.Waterford,farsouthofhisintendeddestination.Twopolicemen onbicyclessoonstoppedhimanddiscoveredhiswirelesssetandequipment.Heenquirednervously whatwouldhappennext.‘Don’tworry,wewillhangyou,that’sall,’saidtheconstableamiably. NobodyhadtoldthewretchedSchützaboutIrishjokes,andhesuffereddaysofterrorbeforefinding himselfimprisonedwithmostofhisAbwehrcomrades. HermannGörtzwasarrestedon27November1941,duringapoliceraidinDublin’sBlackheath Parkdistrict,launchedinsearchofIRAmen,notGermanspies.TheAbwehr ’sfinalbidtoputagents intoIrelandendedasswiftlyandabsurdlyasalltheothers.On16December1943ayoungIrishman namedJohnFrancisO’ReillywasparachutedintoCo.Clare,nearMorveen.Threedayslaterhewas followedbyasecondman,thirty-five-year-oldJohnKenny,whohadofferedhisservicestothe GermansafterbeingdetainedintheoccupiedChannelIslandsandinternednearBrunswick.On landinginIreland,bothmenwereswiftlypickedupbythepolice–O’Reillyhadacceptedhis assignmentmerelytosecureapassagehomefromtheLuftwaffe.Soonafterthewarended,allthe AbwehrmeninAthlonecampwerefreed,butHermannGörtzwasinformedthathewastobe deportedtotheBritishZoneofoccupiedGermany.On23May1947,onreceivingthisnewshe immediatelytookpoisonintheAliens’RegistrationOfficeatDublinCastle.Hewasfifty-seven,a patheticandinsomewayssympatheticfigure,tormentedbyself-pityandalmostinsanelymiscastasa foreignagentoftheThirdReich. YetifGörtz’sstoryendedwithadeath,theGermanswholandedinIrelandknewthatwhatever hardshipstheymightsufferinAthlonecamp,nobodywasgoingtokillthem.Operatinginaneutral state,theyenjoyedthecomfortableassurancethatthepriceoffailurewouldbemereimprisonment, notarendezvouswiththeexecutioner.Andbeforelaughingtooloudlyattheabsurdityofthe Abwehr ’soperations,itshouldberecalledthatifHitlerhadconqueredBritain,Irelandwouldhave shareditsfate.IrishjokeswouldhavestoppedasassuredlyasIrishneutralitywouldhavebeenforfeit. 2 NO M A N’ S LA ND Otherneutralstateswhichoptedoutoftheirneighbours’existentialstruggleprovidedtheatresmuch moreimportantthanIrelandforthetwosides’secretoperations.Incitieswherelightsburnedbrightly andasemblanceoftranquillitypersisted,therivalbelligerentssustainedtheircontestformastery,but withbuttonedfoils.Therewaschildishjostlingforadvantage:GermanattachésinAnkaraflaunted beforetheirBritishcounterpartstinsofGoldFlakecigarettescapturedbytheFallschirmjägerin Crete.InLourençoMarques,wherethelocalBritish,GermanandItalianagentssharedquartersinthe Polanahotel,therewerespatsaboutwhichnation’sradionewsbulletinsshouldbeairedinthehotel lounge,resolvedonlywhenthemanagementbannedallofthem. Bern,Lisbon,Madrid,Stockholmbecameintelligencestreetmarkets,whereagent-handlers rendezvousedwiththemenandwomenwhodevilledforthematmortalriskinenemyterritory.Inthe PressRoomofStockholm’sGrandhotel,BritishandAmericancorrespondentsandspiesmingled dailywithGermans.Goldandcashwerepassed–sometimeshugesumsinmanycurrencies–stolen documentsreceived.Localpolicemengaveaidtofavouredclients:Portugal’ssecuritychiefAgothino Lourenço,anardentpro-NaziandcloseacolyteofPresidentSalazar,ensuredthatthelocalAbwehr receivedcopiesofeverypassengerlistforBOAC’sClipperflightstoEngland.TheSpanishuntil 1944indulgedahugeGermanespionageoperation.AsearchatBritishBermudaoftwoSpanish liners,theCabodeHornosandCabodeBuenaEsperanza,homeboundfromtheUS,revealedthemto becarryingAxisagentswithdispatcheswritteninsecretink. ThejungleofallegiancesbecameespeciallyintricateinAfghanistan,wherealmosteverysenior militaryandpoliticalfigurewasinthepayofonebelligerentoranother,andoftenofseveral.Axis intelligencechiefsconvincedthemselvesthatIndiannationalismwastheproductoftheirsubtle machinations–thoughintruth,ofcourse,itderivedentirelyfromdomesticsentiment.BhagatRam GumassatwasthebrotherofanationalisthangedbytheBritishformurderingthegovernorofthe Punjab.HebecameafrequentguestattheGermanembassyinKabul,wherehehelpedtoarrangethe journeytoBerlinofhisleader,SubhasChandraBose.(TheRussians,obscurely,convinced themselvesthatevenwhenBoselaterrecruitedan‘IndianNationalArmy’tofightagainsttheBritish, hewasinthepayofMI6.IntheNKVD’swords:‘HemaintainedpersonalcontactswithHitlerwhich allowedBritishsecretservicestobeinformedoftheGermans’planswithregardtoIndiaandthe MiddleEast.’)GumassatarrivedonemorningattheSovietembassyinKabultoexplainthat,though theGermanssupposedhimtobetheirman,hewishedinsteadtoserveMoscow.Centretookhimon itsbooksasagent‘Rom’.InFebruary1942theAbwehrgavehimsomeweaponsandahandsomesum ofcash,topromotesabotageinIndia.Inafinaldizzyingtwist,Romgavemostofthemoneytothe USSR’sDefenceFund. Ineveryneutralcapital,intelligenceofficerspuzzledovertheperennialenigmaoftheirtrade: whichsidewasthisorthatsourcereallyserving?Oftentheanswerwasbothorneither,merelytheir ownpockets.InIstanbul,anArmenianTurkishinformernamedShamlireceived650Turkishpounds amonthfromtheJapanese,350fromtheGermans,thesameagainfromtheHungariansandasimilar sumfromEuropaPress,anewsorganisation.AlargeItaliancolonyinthesamecitygossipedinthe Casad’Italia,theformerSavoyardembassynowasocialcentre.Rome’sintelligenceoperationswere controlledbyitsmilitaryattaché,Lt.Col.StefanoZavatarri,whomnobodyheldinmuchregard.A Turkishsecretpolicemansaidcontemptuously:‘TheItaliansareHitler ’s“petitschiens”–“lapdogs”– theymakeuseofthelowesttypeofagent–mongrelGreeks,Armenians,moslems,Jewsfromthe slums.TheTurksgetwhatevertheywantfromthistypeofagentandthen,whentheydeemthetime propitious,lockhimup.’TheItaliansdidnobetterinRiodeJaneiro,whereinOctober1941they persuadedEdmonddiRobilant,aseniorexecutiveoftheLatiairline,tostartasecretshippingmovementmonitoringservice.Hewasgivenawirelessand$2,600,someofwhichheusedtorenta rabbitfarminJacarepaguáfromwhichtotransmit.Thefactthathefailedtoprovideasinglereport didnotsparehimfromafourteen-yearsentenceforespionageafterBrazilianpolicearrestedhimin September1942. SSSturmbannführerHansEggentravelledregularlytoSwitzerlandtocollectinformation,notably fromtwobusinessmen,PaulHolzachandPaulMeyer-Schwertenbach.Each,however,briefedSwiss intelligenceaboutthemeetings,andnobodywasconfidentabouttheirallegiance,evenafterOSS’s AllenDullesreceivedreportsbasedonUltradecryptsspecifyingtheinformationtheyhadgivento Berlin.MeanwhileinStockholmCol.MakotoOnodera,theJapanesemilitaryattaché,whowas esteemedinTokyo,reliedheavilyoninformationfromaPolishofficernamedPeterIvanov–who alsoreportedtothePolesinLondon. ForeignersarrivinginPortugal’scapitalfromthebatteredanddarkenedcitiesofEuropewere enthralledbythejanglingwhitetrams,caféorchestras,flowerseverywhere.MalcolmMuggeridge wrote:‘Lisbon,withallitslights,seemedaftertwoyearsofblackoutlikeacelestialvision…Forthe firstdayorsoIjustwanderedaboutthestreets,marvellingattheshops,therestaurantswiththeir interminablemenus,thesmartwomenandcaféssprawlingoverthepavements…Bynightthe cabarets,thedancinglights,theburstsofjazzmusiccomingthroughhalfopeneddoors–Pleasure stalkingthestreets,withmanytrailingit.’GermanoperationsinLisbonwerebasedontheirfivestoreyconsulate,mostofitoccupiedbytheAbwehrandSD,thoughMI5alsoheldalistof135local addressesusedbytheirstaff,oftenforprivatepurposes.Inthespringof1942theAbwehr ’sMajor Brede,aLuftwaffeofficerunwillinglypostedintointelligence,informedCanaristhathisLisbon stationwascorruptfromtoptobottom.Theadmiraldismissedthechargeoutofhand,butofcourseit wastrue. Mostmeetingsandtransactionsonneutralturfwereconducteddiscreetlyanduneventfully,because itsuitedeverybodytopreservethetranquillityoftheinternationalbrokeragehouses.InSeptember 1940theMI6officer‘Biffy’DunderdaleusedLisbon’sSanGeronimochurchasarendezvousto deliverawirelesssetandcodestoaFrenchintelligencemanwhoborethembacktoVichy,from whichsomeoftheDeuxièmeBureau’smen,prominentamongthemtheFrenchcodebreakingchief GustaveBertrand,sustainedcontactwithLondonuntilNovember1942.Hethenwentontherununtil hewasextractedfromtheMassifCentralbyanRAFaircraftinJune1944. Amidalltheindulgentwininganddininginneutralcapitals,however,atintervalstherewere dramasandspasmsofviolencewhendealswentwrong,suspectedtraitorsweresilenced,orthelocal authoritiescheckedspies’perceivedexcesses.On20April1940MI6’smaninStockholmwas arrestedandchargedwithseekingtosabotageSwedishironoreexportstoGermany.Thisprovoked oneamongmanyexplosionsfromtheBritishambassador,SirVictorMallet,whowrotetoLondon:‘I donotwantyoutothinkthatIamblindtothefactthatitmaysometimesbenecessarytoemploy methodsofthiskindwhenwearewagingawaragainstanenemywhohitspersistentlybelowthebelt. Butmycomplaintsare,firstly,thatoursleuthsseemtobethoroughlybadattheirjob:sofartheyhave achievedlittleinSwedenbeyondputtingmeandthemselvesinanawkwardposition.Secondly,Iam inclinedtodoubtwhetherthegameisworththecandleinacountrywherenotonlyarethepoliceand themilitaryverymuchonthealert…butwhereapolicyofmutualconfidencehasshownitself repeatedlytobetheonewhichpaysbest.’Broadway’smaninStockholmreceivedaneight-yearjail sentence,itsseverityreflectingtheperceivedmightofGermanyandweaknessofBritaininthe summerof1940. StalindemandedthedeathsofforeignenemiesevenmorewhimsicallythandidHitler.Whenhe heardthattheformerGermanchancellorFranzvonPapen,nowservingasHitler ’sambassadorto neutralTurkey,hadheldameetingwiththePope,andwasbeingtoutedasapossibleheadof governmentiftheNaziscouldbeousted,hewassoangrythatheorderedvonPapenkilled.AnNKVD attempttookplaceinAnkaraon24February1942whichfailedwhenMoscow’sBulgarianassassin blewhimselfupwithhisownbomb,leavingvonPapenonlyslightlyinjured.MeanwhiletheKremlin convinceditselfthatArgentina,hometoaquarterofamillionGerman-speakers,wasamajorNazi base,andonStalin’spersonalorderstheNKVDburneddowntheGermanbookshopinBuenosAires andarrangedscoresofotherincendiaryattacksonenemyproperty.Chargeswereplantedin warehousesholdinggoodsboundforHitler ’sempire,andaboardshipsthatcarriedthem.TheFBI andOSSsharedRussianparanoiaaboutArgentina,andweredisgustedbyitsgovernment’s interpretationofneutrality,wherebywhenagivennumberofallegedNaziagentswerearrestedand jailed,thesamenumberofAlliedsympathiserswasalsoroundedup.Similareven-handednesswas displayedoverreleases:whenArgentina’smilitarygovernmentbelatedlybrokeoffrelationswith GermanyinJanuary1944,116knownorsuspectedAxisagentswerearrested.Most,however,were soonsetfree,andintheFBI’sbitterwords‘areundoubtedlyonceagainactiveonbehalfoftheReich’. TheWesternAlliedsecretservicesseldommurderedanyone;assassinationwasseenasa dangerousgametostart,aswasconfirmedbythereprisalsfollowingthe1942killingofReinhard HeydrichinCzechoslovakia.In1944MI6considered,thenrejected,aschemefortargetedkillingsof AbwehrpersonnelinFrance.BillBentinckagreed,sayingthatwhilehewasnotsqueamish,this seemed‘thetypeofbrightideawhichintheendproducesagooddealoftroubleanddoeslittle good’.AnepisodeinSpainbecameoneofMI6’suglierlegends.PaulClairewasaFrenchnaval officeremployedtohelprunagentsintoFrancebysea.InJuly1941theBritishembassyinMadrid reportedinacutealarmthatClairehadvisitedtheVichyFrenchnavalattaché,confessedhissecret warrole,anddemandedhelptoescapeintoFrance.Whatwastobedone?Ifhecrossedthefrontier, hewouldbefreetotelltheGermanswhateverhechose.AlanHillgarth,thebuccaneeringnaval attaché,wasgivenadramaticmandatebyBroadway:‘liquidateClaire’orseizeamemberofhis familyasahostagetosecurehissilence. At1a.m.on25July,MI6officerHamiltonStokesreportedthatheandHillgarthhadsuccessfully luredClairetotheBritishembassyand‘druggedhimintounconsciousness’.Thepairthensetoutby carforGibraltarwithClaireprostrateonthebackseat.‘C’draftedapersonalsignaltotheRock, orderingthatthetraitorshouldbeseizedonarrival,chargedwithtreasonandheldincommunicado. Thisorderbecameredundant,however,whenMI6’sMoroccorepresentative,whochancedtobein Gibraltar,signalled:‘Consignmentarrived…completelydestroyed…owingtoover-attentionin transit…DamageregrettedbutIsubmititisforbest.’AlaterreportexplainedthatClairehad suddenlyrecoveredconsciousnesswhilethecarpassedthroughavillageinAndalusia,andstarted shriekingatpassers-byforhelp.Hiscaptorssilencedhimbyacrackovertheheadwitharevolver whichprovedfatal. SirSamuelHoare,theMadridambassador,wasfuriousaboutthepotentialscandal.Menzies admittedthatClaireshouldneverhavebeenpostedtoSpain,andtherewasindeedembarrassing fallout.VichyFrenchdiplomatsinMadridprotestedtotheSpanishForeignMinistry,andon12 AugustRadioFrancebroadcastamoreorlessaccuratereportoftheaffair,describinghowClaire’s captorshadsilencedlocalvillagerswhoheardhisscreamsbysaying,‘Don’tgetupset,it’sonlya memberoftheembassygonemadandwearetakinghimtoaSanatorium.’On14AugusttheLondon DailyTelegraphcarriedamockingstoryheaded‘NazisInventaKidnapping’.Asisoftenthecase withsuchsagas,thereportseemedsofantastic,andBerlinsochronicallymendacious,thatfew readersathomeorabroadgaveitcredence.InJuly1942CommanderIanFlemingofnaval intelligenceinformedtheRedCrossthatClairewas‘missingbelieveddrowned’enroutetoBritain ontheSSEmpireHurst,whichhadbeensunkbyenemyaircrafton11August1941,afortnightafter theFrenchman’sactualdeath.MI6feltobligedtopayClaire’swidowapensiontosustainthisfiction, ‘howeverrepugnantitmaybetorewardthedependantsofatraitor ’. Ontheotherside,on12May1944,BletchleydecryptedasomewhathystericalmessagetoTokyo fromtheJapaneseministerinMadrid,complainingaboutayoungfellow-countrymanofhisnamed Sakimura,whohadbeenroamingtheSpanishcapitalexpressingenthusiasmfortheAlliedcause.The ministertoldtheForeignOffice:‘Underthesecircumstancesitseemstomethatthereisnoother courseopentousbuttosetasideallhalf-heartedorhumanemethodsandtakedrasticsteps,availing ourselvesoftheassistanceofsomesuchorganastheGestapo,andeliminatinghim.’Thereisno evidence,however,thatAxisagentsactedonthisundiplomaticproposal. Stockholmwasakeyobservationpostforeveryintelligenceservice,thoughintheearlywaryears Britishship-watchingoperationswerehamperedbysomestronglypro-NaziSwedishnavalofficers. TheNorwegiansmaintainedanintelligencemissionledbyCol.RosherLund,whichdidusefulwork amongitsfellow-Scandinavians.ThelocalMI6stationgeneratedsevenhundredreportsamonth, mostlyfragmentsofinformationaboutGermanforcesintheregion,collectedbytravelling businessmen.AmongthemanycharlatanswhoofferedinformationwasaRussianémigréwho,latein 1943,offeredMI6asourceintheJapaneselegation,togetherwithaneconomistinBerlinwhocould providegossipfromGöring’shousekeeper.MoreprofitablewasaDanecodenamed‘Elgar ’who,for morethanayearstartinginDecember1942,deliveredsheavesofmaterialaboutNaziindustry, includingsomeV-weaponintelligence.Ononeoccasionintheautumnof1943,‘Elgar ’arrivedin StockholmwithaconsignmentofindustrialacidbroughtfromGermany,inwhichwerehiddenglass bottlescontainingthreehundredfilmedreports.InJanuary1944‘Elgar ’wascaughtbytheGestapo andtoldeverythingheknewabouthisMI6contactsinStockholm.Forgoodmeasure,hethrewin somefantasiesaboutBritishspygroupsinBerlin,Hamburg,Bonn,KönigsbergandVienna.These revelationsmayhavesavedtheDane’sneck,sincehesurvivedthewarinGermancaptivity. TheNKVD’sColonelBorisRybkin,undercoverasembassyfirstsecretary,playedakeyrolein SovietcovertoperationsinStockholm,manyofwhichwereconcernedwithsecuringsuppliesof commodities.ApopularSwedishactor,KarlEarhardt,becameanintermediaryforpurchasinghightensilesteelforaircraftconstruction.TheWallenbergfamily,whichcontrolledtheEnskildaBank, profitedhandsomelyfromexchangingRussianplatinumforscarceindustrialmetals.Rybkin’swife Zoya,hisfellow-NKVDofficer,describedhowonedayshesawseveralingotsonherhusband’sdesk. ‘Tin?’sheaskedcuriously.‘Tryliftingone,’saidthecolonel,andshefoundherselfbarelyabletodo so.Nonetheless,whateverthesuccessesoftheNKVD’sStockholmasacommercialconduit,the modernofficialhistoriansofSovietintelligencefranklyadmitthatitfailedtoestablishnetworksin neighbouringScandinaviancountries,andespeciallyinitsattemptstoexploreGermannuclear research,heavywaterproductioninNorwayandsuchlike.TheprincipalintelligencevalueofSweden totheRussians,astoalltheAllies,wasasawindowonGermany. MalcolmMuggeridge,MI6’smaninPortugueseMozambique,lodgedatthePolanahotelin LourençoMarquesalongsideDrLeopoldWerz,theGermanvice-consulandAbwehrrepresentative– ‘youthful,blond,pinkandearnest’.WerzhadescapedfrominternmentinSouthAfrica.Hishistory waswell-known,becauseluridarticlesabouthisNaziintelligenceconnectionshadappearedin newspapersonbothsidesoftheAtlantic.AlsolivingatthePolanawasMussolini’sstandard-bearer, anItaliannamedCampiniwhostruttedinemulationofhisDuceandevenlikewiseaffectedacloak. MuchofCampini’strafficwasinterceptedatBletchley,forinstanceasignalof13January1943, reporting:‘AconvoyoftenAmericanshipswithtroops,warandaviationmaterialleftCapetownon 11/1for?Sydney.’Intheweeksthatfollowed,Campinialsowirelessed:‘6Loadedtankersfrom PersianGulfreachedDurbanon11/1’;‘TheEnglishhaveraisedthesalariesofsailorsto£27a month’;‘28.1.43alargeAmericanconvoyboundforAustraliapassedthroughCapetown’;‘4tankers haveleftDurbanforPersianGulf.’On29March1943anMI5officernotedontheseintercepts: ‘AssumethismaterialcomesfromLEO.SendingsamestuffasWerz.IfLEOisDoctorWERZin LourencoMarques,hewouldseemanadmirablecreaturetohavestuffplantedonhim,ashislittle items,whichsofarseemtobewhollyinaccurate,reachthethreeAxiscapitalsinamatterofdays.’ MuggeridgeenjoyedaccesstosomefacilitiesdeniedtohisAxisrivals,suchassummariesoftheir outgoingmaterial,forwardedbyKimPhilby.Theembryospylearnedhistradebyexperience:when hefirstattemptedtobribealocalpoliceinspector,themanspurnedhislargessewithcontempt,saying thattheGermanspaidthreetimesasmuch,theJapaneseandItaliansevenmore.Themostinteresting revelationtocomeMuggeridge’swayduringhisearlymonthswasthatDrWerzwenttobedina hairnet.Moreserioustasksincludingthekidnapping,andtransfertoBritish-administeredSwaziland, ofanItalian-paidship-watcher,whowasreportingAlliedconvoymovements.TheMI6agent’smost excitingassignmentwastoorganisethehijackingofaGreekmerchantship,whosecaptainwas discoveredbyBletchleytobeplanningarendezvouswithaU-boatintheMozambiquechannel.The arrangementsforthiscoupweremadeinMarie’sPlace,alocalbrothel.Membersofthecrew, subornedbylargebribes,dulyseizedtheircaptainandsailedtheshiptoDurban. Muggeridgeformedanacquaintancewithaglamorousenemyagent,thehalf-estrangedwifeofa localGerman,andwithJohann,herlover,whohadworkedforHimmlerandreminisced entertaininglyabouthim.TheMI6manalsoscreenedagroupofPolishJewswhomtheJapanesehad releasedfrominternment,andwhowerethereafterdispatchedtoBritishTanganyika.Thesesmall encountersandeventswerethehighlightsofatwo-yearsojourninLourençoMarques,thoughlikeall agentshedispatchedcopiousreports,dominatedbytrivia.Inonesense,andasthecynicalspyhimself declared,hisactivitieswerefatuous.Butinthemidstofaworldatwar,itwasindispensableforevery nationtoberepresentedinsuchplacesasMozambique,ifonlytoensurethattheothersidewasnot leftfreetomakemischiefthere. NeighbouringSouthAfricawasahotbedofNazisympathisers,eagertoassisttheReich.Paul Trompke,theGermanconsul-generalinLourençoMarques,aportlyfifty-year-old,rananAfrikaner agentnetworkoutofMozambique.OneofthesewasSydneyRobeyLeibbrandt,aformerSouth AfricanheavyweightboxingchampionwhospentthreeyearsinGermany,joinedtheWehrmachtand wastrainedasaparatrooperandsaboteurbytheBrandenburgRegimentbeforereturninghome secretlyinJune1941,equippedwithawirelesssetandardentNaziconvictions,inaschooner captainedbytheastonishingHeinrichGarbers.Leibbrandtfoundfriendsandsympathisershappyto hidehim,butfewwhowishedtojoinarevolt.OnChristmasEve1942hewasarrestedwhiledriving betweenJohannesburgandPretoria,andsentencedtodeathbyacourttowhichhetestifiedonlyby givingaNazisalute. RecognisingthevulnerabilityofAfrikaneropinion,primeministerJanSmutscommutedthe sentenceonthisnationalsportinghero.Likewise,whenMalcolmMuggeridgetriedtoget JohannesburgpolicetopickupacourierdrivingtothecitycarryingmessagesfromtheLourenço MarquesAbwehrstation,hewascrisplyinformedthattherewasnotanAfrikanerhomesteadinthe TransvaalwhichwouldnotbeproudtofeedBerlin’smanandspeedhimonhisway.Bletchley interceptedasteadystreamofwirelessmessagesfromAfrikanerpro-Nazis,whichprompted occasionalround-ups,suchasoneinJuly1942whichresultedintenarrestsandthediscoveryof someweaponsanddynamiteintendedtobeusedforsabotageinDurban.Butthesignaltrafficmadeit plainthatmostenemysympathiserswerecontenttoawaitaGermanvictoryratherthanprecipitatean immediateuprising.Twocodedmessageswerefoundinapro-NazihouseinEastLondon.Thefirst read:‘Everythingalrightworksomewhatsluggishpeoplealsopoor…notmuchsabotageherein EastLondon.’Thesecondwailed:‘Itisdamnedhopelesstoworkalone.’Itwasfortunateforthe AlliesthattheAfrikanerslackedbothaccesstoinformationofvaluetoHitlerandscopeforraising muchmayhem. Switzerland,atthehubofEuropebetweenGermany,FranceandItaly,wasthemostimportantofall intelligencejunctions,ateemingsoukofspies,refugees,diplomatsandcrooksofallnationalities.In asinglemorning,amanmightvisittheBernofficesofMI6,OSS,theAbwehrandSD,allwithina fewhundredyardsofeachother.Thecityplayedhosttomanyexiledpoliticians,someofthem prominentandwell-connectedinGermany,Austria,France.Secretwirelesscommunicationsenabled theBritish,AmericansandRussianstotransmitamassofinformationandfabricationderivedfrom sourcesinsideGermany.TheNazislikewisesoughttousethecountryasawindowontheworld.In Bern,theAbwehrpickedupinformationfromProfessorKeller,headoftheSwisscommercial delegationtoLondon;fromthemanageroftheBankofInternationalSettlements;andfromafew seamenhomeonleave.Oneagentcodenamed‘Ober ’broughtbackfromGibraltardetailsoffootball matchesbeingplayedbetweenBritishunitteams,whichsupposedlycontributedtoorder-of-battle intelligence.TheGermans’mostvaluedagentwas‘Jakob’,otherwiseWalterBosshardofSwiss intelligence.TheAbwehrclaimedinalltohaveathousandinformantsinSwitzerland,whileithadits ownGestapobranchoffice,‘BureauF’,attachedtotheBernembassy. Thelocalespionageindustry,whichinvolvedrepresentativesoftheChinese,PolesandCzechsas wellasthemajorbelligerents,posedaconstantdilemmafortheBerngovernmentabouthowfarto indulgeit.Swissintelligencehadbeenheadedsince1937bytheenergeticLt.Col.RogerMasson. FrantišekMoravecheldMassoninhighrespect,notleastbecausetheSwissnevertroubledtheCzech intelligencecellinZürich.Thecolonel’sresponsibilitywastopreserveSwitzerland’sindependence byensuringthatnobelligerent,aboveallneighbouringGermany,feltsufficientlythreatenedor provokedtobomboroccupythecantons.Amongthenation’spopulationofsixmillion,asmallbut vociferousminoritylobbiedanddemonstratedfortheprivilegeofincorporationintheThirdReich. BankersandindustrialistsmadelargeprofitsbyexportingcommoditiestoGermany,providing financialservicesfortheNazileadershipcollectivelyandseverally,andexploitingthemurderofrich Jews.YetmostSwiss,asdemocrats,preferredthattheAlliesshouldwinthewar.TheGermansknew this:followingtheir1940occupationofFrance,theylaidhandsondocumentswhichrevealed discussionsbetweenBernandParisaboutjointresistanceintheeventofaGermaninvasionof Switzerland. Massonintervenedagainstforeignagentsandmadearrestsonlywhenahubbubamongthespiesof onenationoranotherbecametooconspicuoustobeignored.HealsostrovetopreventSwisscitizens fromcausingembarrassmentbytakingsides.Inthecourseofthewar,1,389peoplewerearrestedin Switzerlandforbetrayingsecrets.Militarycourtspassed478sentences,283onSwissnationalsand 195onforeigners.Lifewasbynomeansalwaystranquilforthelocalsecurityforces.GRUoperator AlexanderFootereportedconsternationintheinternationalespionagecommunitywhenaSwiss policemanwasblownupbyaninfernalmachinehechancedupon,andattemptedtodefuse.The Englishmanwrote:‘Weneverknewwhosebombitwas.’ Inmostcapitals,diplomatswerebetterinformedthananyspy.TheGermanambassadorinLisbon, BaronOswaldvonHoyningen-Huene,wassharp,energeticandwellliked;hewasoncloseterms withtheintimatesofPortuguesedictatorAntónioSalazar,andranaspecialunitforpurchasing foreignnewspapers,whicheverywarringnationminedasintelligencesources.MI5became concernedaboutsensitivematerialbeingpassedtoMadrid–andthencetoBerlin–bytheDukeof Alba,theSpanishambassadorinLondon,whowascaressedinBritisharistocraticcirclesasan impeccably-manneredgrandee.Hisacquaintance,includingsuchmembersofthegovernmentasSir JohnAnderson,werecontenttooverlookAlba’sroleastherepresentativeofFranco’smurderous tyranny:hisdispatches–secretlyinterceptedandreadbyAnthonyBlunt–revealedhimasbeneficiary ofmorethanafewwell-sourcedindiscretions.GuyLiddellwrote:‘Probablyagooddealof informationgoeswestoverthesecondglassofport.’Alba,likemanyotherdiplomatsaroundthe world,almostcertainlyprovidedmorereliableintelligencethanhisnation’ssecretagents. 14 ALittleHelpfromTheirFriends 1 ‘ I T S TI NK S , BUT S O M EBO D Y H A S TO D O I T’ GuyLiddellofMI5wroteinJune1943,followingthediscoveryofacommunistcellintheAir Ministry:‘Unfortunatelythelawissomewhatinadequateinthecaseofamanwhoisspyingonbehalf ofanally.’Theprincipallinkinthering,InternationalBrigadeveteranDouglasSpringhall,was attemptingtopasstotheRussiansdetailsof‘Window’,BomberCommand’stopsecret–andthenstill unused–radarbaffler.Springhalleventuallyservedfourandahalfyearsofaseven-yearprison sentence.InthecourseofMI5’sinvestigation,itwasdiscoveredthathewasalsoincontactwithan MI6officer,RayMilne,whowaspromptlysacked,andwithCaptainDesmondUrenofSOE’s Hungariansection,whoreceivedaseven-yearprisonsentence.Liddellwrote:‘Penetrationofthe servicesbytheCommunistPartyisbecomingratherserious.’ TheSecondWorldWarwasneverasimpletwo-sidedcontestbetweentheAlliesandtheAxis, convenientlydefinableasthecausesofGoodandEvil.Allmannerofforceswereinplay.Currents swirledceaselesslywithinsocieties,assupportersofleftandright,ofimperialismandantiimperialism,orofrivalfactionalinterests,viedforprimacyinthepost-warworld.Churchillcreated thenecessaryrhetoricalmythofthe‘GrandAlliance’,anoblepartnershipofBritain,Russiaandthe UnitedStates.YetthethreePowerscherishedentirelydifferentvisionsofthenewuniversethey wishedtoemergefromvictory.Stalinwasthemostclear-sightedwarlord:hisaccommodationwith RooseveltandChurchilltosecurethedestructionofHitlerdidnotabatebyajotortittlehisdesire thereaftertopulldowntheedificeofbourgeoiscapitalismabouttheirheads.Whereasneitherthe BritishnortheAmericansspiedontheSovietUnionduringthewaryears,Stalin’sagentsconducted hugelyambitiousespionageoperationsagainstthedemocracies.HeedlessofNaziinterruptions,the KremlinneverallowedtheRevolutiontosleep. ItwashardforWesterncounter-intelligenceservicestoassesstheriskposedbyleft-wing sympathisersinthetumultuouspoliticalclimateofthemid-twentiethcentury.Therewasmockery then,andhasbeenmoresince,aboutMI5suspicionsfocuseduponsuchcommunistjournalistsas ClaudCockburn.Paranoiaisanoccupationalhazardofintelligenceofficers:LordCherwell’soffice onceshowedR.V.JonesalistofBritishscientistsandengineerswhoseloyaltywasconsidered doubtful.Amongthirty-oddnames,Jonessawseveralwhomitwasridiculoustomistrust,foremost amongthemthatofBarnesWallis,creatoroftheRAF’sdambustingmines.Ittranspiredthatasecurity officerhadcompiledmostofthelistfromhisownfancifulimagination. Yethundredsofimpeccablymiddle-classBritishandAmericanmenandwomen–includingIvor Montagu,brotherofEwen,thenavalofficerwhoranthe‘Mincemeat’deception–didindeedbetray theircountrytotheSovietUnion,whileahandfulofBritishfascistsympathisers,andmanymore Europeanones,lenttheirservicestotheNazis.MI5initiallyrecommendedrejectingthearthistorian AnthonyBluntforemploymentinmilitaryintelligence,becausehehadvisitedRussiaandonce offeredacontributiontoaleftistmagazine.Posteritywouldderidetheuseofsuchcriteriatocast doubtonaman’strustworthiness,hadnotBluntbeenlaterexposedasatraitor.NoelAnnan,an academicwhospentthewarinthesecretworld,wroteabouttherecruitmentofsuchfiguresasKim PhilbyandGuyBurgess:‘Theintelligenceserviceswerestaffedinpeacetimewithmenwhoregarded Stalinasthefirstenemy,andHitleradisagreeablefellowbutapotentialally;[civilisedpeople] rejoicedtoseeintelligentmenoftheleftbeingrecruitedtoredressthebalance.’ Itwashardtobalancetherivalclaimsofpersonalfreedomandnationalsecurityinthemidstofa war.MI5hadachievednotablesuccessesagainstSovietspyringsinBritainduringthe1920sand 1930s.Itsofficersdisplayedimagination,indeedbrilliance,inhandlingand‘turning’Nazispies.The securityservicenonethelessfailedtoidentifythemostimportantoftheBritishcommunisttraitors whopenetratedWhitehallandthesecretcommunity.AnthonyBlunt,bythenservinginMI5,toldhis NKVDhandlerthathefounditpersonallyreassuringtodiscoverthatthepre-warSovietinformant CaptainJohnKingwasexposedonlywhenadefectordenouncedhim. FromJune1941until1945theWesternAlliedgovernments,andespeciallytheBritish,were cautiousabouthowmuchtheytoldtheRussians,aboveallbecausetheyfearedleakageoftheUltra secret.TheyconstantlyforwardedoperationalinformationthatmightassisttheRedArmy,but sourcedittonon-existentAlliedagentsinGermany.Evenonthoseterms,thetrafficmadeBroadway uneasy,partlybecauseitwentexclusivelyoneway.Inthefirstweeksof‘Barbarossa’,Bletchley interceptedanorderdirectingFourthPanzerArmytosupporttheencirclementofSmolensk,while theLuftwaffebombedraillinksbehindtheRedArmy’spositions.Ontheeveningof15July1941 Churchill,afterreadingthisdecrypt,scribbledbelowthetextinhisredink:‘Surelyitisrighttogive themwarningofthis.Pleasereportbeforeaction.’ StewartMenziestookstrongexception,minutingtheprimeminister:‘Iamoftheopinionthatthe source[Broadway’stermforUltra]woulddefinitelybeimperilledifthisinformationwaspassedto Moscowinitspresentform,asitwouldbeimpossibleforanyagenttohavesecuredsuchinformation regardingoperationsforthe16thJuly.Ihave,however,arrangedwiththeWarOfficeforthegistto beincorporatedwithothermaterial.’Menziesadded:‘IwouldpointoutthatGeneral[Mason-] MacFarlane[BritishmilitaryattachéinMoscow]wasinstructedtoinformtheRussiansthatwe possessawell-placedsourceinBerlinwhohasoccasionalaccesstooperationalplansanddocuments. ThisexplanationhasbeenacceptedbytheRussians.Ihave,however,refusedtofurnishthemwith detailed[unit]identifications,whichmightwellarousetheirsuspicionsastotherealoriginofthe information.’ SuchprecautionswereconfoundedbythefactthattheNKVDandGRUwerereceivingasteady streamofdocumentsandUltrainterceptsfromhighly-placedBritishinformants.Amongthemost notableofthese,JohnCairncrossworkedearlyinthewarasprivatesecretarytoLordHankey,a cabinetminister,andthereafteratBletchleyandelsewhereforMI6.Thereisalsoallegedtohavebeen anotherSovietinformantattheParkearlierinthewar,neveridentified,andcodenamed‘Baron’. AnthonyBluntworkedforMI5.KimPhilbybecameaseniorofficerofMI6.GuyBurgesswas successivelyemployedbyMI6,theBBCandtheForeignOffice.DonaldMacleanworkedintheupper reachesoftheForeignOffice.OtherBritishsourcesprovidedtechnicalintelligence,aboveallabout theatomicbombprogramme. GuyLiddellofMI5wroteinNovember1942,amidreflectionsonthesagaofRichardSorge, whichhadbeenreportedtoLondonbyinformantsinTokyo:‘ThereisnodoubtthattheRussiansare farbetterinthematterofespionagethananyothercountryintheworld.Iamperfectlycertainthat theyarewellbeddeddownhereandthatweshouldbemakingmoreactiveinvestigations.Theywill beagreatsourceoftroubletouswhenthewarisover.’Liddelldidnotknowthehalfofit.Soviet penetrationoftheBritishgovernment,scientificinstitutionsandintelligencemachinewasalready moreextensivethanhecouldhaveimaginedinhisnightmares.OncetheSovietUnionbecameanally, however,ChurchillwasinsistentthatnointelligenceoperationsshouldbeconductedagainstStalin’s regime.TheForeignOfficeformallyinstructedthesecretservicesthatevenscrutinyofBritish communistsshouldbecircumspect,andthatnoinformantsshouldberecruitedinsidetheSoviet Union.VerylittlewasdonebyMI5eventomonitorNKVDandGRUactivitiesinBritain,and Bletchley’ssmallRussiansectionwasshutdowninDecember1941.Thesehonourablescrupleswere notcreditedbyMoscow,ofcourse,farlessreciprocated. Britishfolklegendtreatstheso-calledCambridgeFiveasauniquegalleryofscoundrels, exemplarsoftherottennesswithintheclasssystem,aknotofgildedyoungmenwhosystematically betrayedtheircountryasnoothersdid.Itseemsmoreappropriate,however,toconsiderthem alongsideMoscow’sBritishagentsfromlessprivilegedbackgrounds–thelikesofthelethally effectivenuclearspyMelitaNorwood–togetherwithhundredsofAmericanswholikewisebetrayed nationalsecretstoStalin’styranny.Communismasacreedenjoyedwidespreadsupportacrossthe Westernworld,inthaterawhenmanypeopleontheleftchosetoblindtheirconsciousnesstothe institutionalisedinhumanityoftheSovietUnion.Intheireyescapitalism,whetherrepresentedby RepublicancorporateinterestsintheUnitedStatesorbytheConservativePartyinBritain,sustained theoppressionoftheworkingclass.‘Lookingaroundusatourownhells,’saidPhilipToynbee,the historianwhobecameacommunistatCambridge,‘wehadtoinventanearthlyparadisesomewhere else.’ MoscowCentre’srecruitersprofitedmightilyfromtheSovietUnion’sstatusasprincipalstandardbearerforcommunismasacreed.ManyNKVDandGRUsourcesaroundtheworldembracedthe fictionthatbygivingsecretstotheComintern,theywereaidinganinternationalidealratherthanany narrowlynationalcause.ZbigniewBrzezinskidefinesideologyascombiningtheoryandactionwith a‘consciousnessofpurposeandofthegeneralthrustofhistory.Itgivesitsadherentsasenseof consistencyandcertaintythatistoooftenabsentamongthose…broughtupinthetraditionofshorttermpragmatism.’EvenbeforetheenormityofthefascistmenaceinGermany,ItalyandSpain becameapparent,left-wingsocialismattractedmanyenlightenedandcompassionatepeople.The creedcamedressedinmanyguises.Explicitlytoavowcommunistsympathieswasnobarrierto admissiontoculturedLondon,ParisorWashingtonsociety,becausecommunismwasnotthen universallyidentifiedwiththebarbaritieslaidbareinthesecondhalfofthetwentiethcentury.James Klugmann,aMoscowinformantwhoworkedforSOE,saidlater:‘Wesimplyknew,allofus,thatthe revolutionwasathand.Ifanyonehadsuggesteditwouldn’thappeninBritainforsaythirtyyears,I’d havelaughedmyselfsick.’ Inthe1930scommunistsseemedtobetheonlypeoplewhowerechallengingfascismwithany conviction,andthe1936outbreakoftheSpanishCivilWardramaticallyenhancedthecredibilityof theSovietUnioninintellectuals’eyes.TheybecameobsessedwithSpaininanevenmoreprofound sensethanalatergenerationembracedVietnam.NoWesternersinthe1960s,howeverhostileto Americanpolicy,tookuparmsforHoChiMinh.YetthousandsofEuropeansandAmericansfought fortheRepublicansinSpain,orworkedtoassistthem.Millionsofpeoplearoundtheworldidentified withthecausewithanalmostreligiousfervour.Inthisfebrileclimate,perhapsmoreintensely politicisedthanatanytimebeforeorsince,Moscowrecruitedyoungidealistsofallnationalitiesto serveascovertwarriorsforcommunism. Centre’sBritishandAmericaninformantswerediversecharacters,unitedbyamessianicbeliefin theirownrightness,indispensabletoenablethemsystematicallytobetraytheiremployers,colleagues andcountry.HughTrevor-Roperreflectedlongafterwardsthatheandmanyothersofhisgeneration hadunderestimatedtheperilsposedbycommunistswithinBritishandotherdemocraticsocieties, becausetheyhadmistakenlyperceivedadherentstothecreedas‘merelythemostradicalofourallies againstfascism,themilitantsontheextremeleftofacoalitioninwhichmenagreedtodifferwith mutualrespect.EducatedliberalEnglishmenandAmericansfailedtounderstandthatcommunismisa religion…[which]cantotallyparalysethementalandmoralfacultiesofitsconvertsandcausethem tocommitanyturpitudeandtosufferanyindignity,foritssake.’ Yetmanyofthosewhocalledthemselvescommuniststhroughoutthe1930sfeltobligedtorecantin thefaceofthesupremecynicismoftheAugust1939dealbetweentheNazisandtheSoviets.Trevor- Roperwrote:‘Manyofourfriendshadbeen,orthoughtthemselves,communistsinthe1930s,andwe wereshockedthatsuchpersonsshouldbedebarredfrompublicserviceonaccountofmerejuvenile illusionswhichanywaytheyhadnowshed;forsuchillusionscouldnotsurvivetheshatteringimpact ofStalin’spactwithHitler.’Thus,asthehightideofenthusiasmforcommunismrecededinthe Westerndemocracies,allbutthemostdoctrinaireconservativesbecamereluctanttoholditagainst youngmenandwomenthattheyhadavowedenthusiasmforMoscowbeforetheNazi–SovietPact exposeditsturpitude. ItremainsnonethelessremarkablethattheCambridgeFive,andothersoftheirkind,sustainedfor somanyyearsparallelrolesinthesecretservicesofBritainandRussia.Thespieshadincommon dysfunctionalpersonalities,togetherwithanangeragainstfamily,classorsocietywhichimpelled theirtreacheryand,intheirownminds,justifiedit.Allhadintellectualgiftsandvaryingdegreesof charm.JohnCairncrosswastheoutsider,bornthesonofaLanarkshireironmongerin1913.He becameascholarshipboyfirstatGlasgowUniversity,thenatTrinity,Cambridge.Frailanduntidyin appearance,adornedwithashockofredhair,hisearnestnessandgaucheriecausedhimtobe dismissedbyChurchill’sprivatesecretaryJockColvilleas‘verybrilliant,veryboring’.Thelatter handicapsethimapartfromtheother,famouslypersonableCambridgespies,thoughbrainssecured himagovernmentjob.In1936Cairncrosspassedtopofhisyearintothecivilservice. Liketheothers,hewasrecruitedtotheNKVDbyArnoldDeutsch,aVienneseJewandenthusiastic sexualliberationistwhosince1934hadoccupiedaflatinLawnRoad,Hampstead,nextdoorto AgathaChristie.Deutschpursuedastrategyofwooingyounghighflierswhoseemedtobeintransit towardsthecorridorsofpower.KimPhilbylaterdescribedhimas‘amarvellousman’,funnyand brilliant,whotreatedtheFiveascomradesratherthansubordinates.Helaterassertedthathenever hesitatedforamomentbeforeembracingDeutsch’sproposal:‘Onedoesnotlooktwiceatanofferof enrolmentinaneliteforce.’DonaldMaclean,afterhis1951flighttoMoscow,justifiedhisown treasoninmoredisdainfulterms:‘It’slikebeingalavatoryattendant.Itstinks,butsomebodyhasto doit.’ CairncrosswasintroducedtoDeutschbyJamesKlugmanninRegent’sParkinMay1937.Afew monthslater,theNKVDmanwasrecalledtoMoscowduringthePurges.Hissuccessorsasthe Cambridgespies’handlersnever,intheireyes,matchedDeutsch’scharmandprofessionalism. Thoughhenarrowlypreservedhisownlife,heremainedsuspectedbyhisemployers,andtheFive’s associationwithhimsustainedtheNKVD’swarinessofthem.Awinter1938assessmentbyMoscow CentrewarnedthattheLondonintelligenceoperation‘wasbasedondoubtfulsources,onanagent networkacquiredatatimewhenitwascontrolledbyenemiesofthepeopleandthereforeextremely dangerous’.AlthoughCentreforatimekeptopenitslinkswiththeFive,theirmaterialwastreated withtheutmostcaution. Earlyin1940,Russiansuspicionsmounted.LavrentiBeriabecameconvincedthattheCambridge spieswereservingeithertheBritishortheGermans,andnotthecauseofsocialism.Herecalledto MoscowAnatolyGorsky,soleremainingmemberoftheNKVD’sLondonlegalresidency.For severalmonths,whilethegreatestwarinhumanhistoryunfolded,Sovietintelligenceconductedno significantoperationsinBritain;Stalinmadeitplaintohisspymastersthathewasmoreinterestedin killingTrotskythanindiscoveringwhatHitler–or,forthatmatter,Churchill–wasdoing.Onlylate in1940didtheintelligencepolicyoftheKremlinshiftwithitsaccustomedabruptness.Thewordwent forththatCentrewastorebuilditsforeignagentnetworks,whichhadbeenallowedtoatrophy. WhenrelationswiththeFivewereresumed,thenewNKVDresidentagentarrangedmeetingswith theminKensingtonGardens,becausetherendezvouswashandyforthenearbySovietembassy.The spiesresumedtheircovertcrusadeforsocialism,eventhoughatthistimeStalinwassupposedlythe associateofHitler.Cairncross’sabsenceofsocialskillscausedhimtobetransferredfromthe ForeignOfficetotheTreasury,andthenin1940tobecomeprivatesecretarytoLordHankey.Ifthere wasanythingMoscowCentredidnotknowaboutthestructureandactivitiesofBritain’sintelligence services,HankeynowfilledthegapsthroughtheagencyofCairncross.Theministerhadconducted anexhaustiveinquiryintoMI6andBletchley.CairncrossslippedhisNKVDhandleracopyof Hankey’sinterimreport,whichhadbeenfirstcirculatedwithinWhitehallinMarch1940. Thereafter,hespentayearasacodebreakerinBletchley’sHut3beforehishealthfailed, promptingatransfertoMI6.Between1941and1945hepassed5,832documentstotheRussians, includingmanydecryptedGermansignals.Cairncrosswassotechnicallyincompetentthathewas incapableofphotographingmaterial:hecouldonlycopyextractsbyhand,ortemporarilyfilchthem forhishandlertofilm.TheNKVDresidentoftenfoundhimselfunabletocopewithencipheringall thematerialhisinformantsupplied,buthewassufficientlyappreciativetogiveCairncrosscashto buyacartomakeiteasierforhimtodeliverstolensecrets.Thespy’spersonalunpopularitywith colleaguesprovednobarriertohiscontinuedemploymentbyMI6,andMoscoweventuallypresented himwiththeOrderoftheRedBannerinrecognitionofhiscontributiontoitsowninterests. GuyBurgesswasanavalofficer ’sson,bornin1911,whoattendedEtonandTrinityCollege, Cambridge,thenbegantoscrapealivingfromtheBBC,whilepartyingonthefringesofLondon intellectualandpoliticalcircles.Eveninaneraofharddrinking,Burgess’sconsumptionofalcohol amazedhisacquaintance.Hisfavouritetipplewasalargeport,whichbecameknowntowaitersatthe ReformClubinPallMallas‘adoubleBurgess’.AmidthedefiantsqualorofhisflatinBondStreet, hesometimescookedastewofporridge,kippers,bacon,garlic,onions‘andanythingelselying aboutinthekitchen’tosustainhimthroughaweekend.InDecember1938hiswitandsocial connectionscausedhimtoberecruitedintoMI6’spropagandadepartment.Aftersomemonthshe transferredtotheBBC,whereheproducedtheradioprogrammeTheWeekinWestminster,apassport tousefulpoliticalcontacts. Thereafterheenjoyedaracketyexistence,commutingbetweenBroadcastingHouseandthe Fitzroviaintellectualworld,thewildershoresofhomosexualLondonandthedarkercorridorsofits secretworld,bothBritishandRussian,whileexcusedfrommilitarycall-upthroughthegoodoffices ofBluntatMI5.Howheavoideddisastermystifiedallthosewhoencounteredhisreckless indiscretionlongbeforehewasexposedasanagentofMoscow.Acharacteristic1942Burgess contributiontothewareffortwastorecruitasanMI5sourceAndrewRevoi,leaderoftheso-called FreeHungariansinLondon–whomhehimselfhadputontheNKVDpayrollbackin1938.During theearlywaryearsBurgesscontributedlesstoCentre’sintereststhantheotherCambridgespies,but in1944SirAlexanderCadoganincomprehensiblyappointedhimtotheForeignOfficeNews Department.BetweenJanuaryandJuly1945Burgesspassed389topsecretfilestohisSoviethandler. DonaldMacleanprovidedMoscowwithitsmostimportantsecretpoliticalintelligence.Hisfamily wereHighlandScots,oppressivelyPresbyterianandcommittedtotemperance;hisfatherwasa lawyerwhoeventuallybecameaLiberalcabinetminister.YoungDonald,bornin1913,waseducated atGresham’s,aharshNorfolkpublicschoolwhereboyshadtheirtrouserpocketssewnupto discourageputtinghandsinthem.Maclean,tallandhandsome,wasoncedescribedbyanadmiring Naziashaving‘perfectAryangoodlooks’.Fromanearlyage,withhisBalkancigarettesand loungingcharm,hecultivatedaposeofmandarinease.PhilipToynbeewroteofhisfriend’s‘lazywit andsophisticatedgoodhumour ’.MacleanandtheothersrecruitedbyMoscowatCambridge professedtobelieve–andperhapsinitiallydidso–thattheywereworkingfortheCominternrather thanexplicitlyfortheSovietUnion.MacleanjoinedtheForeignOfficeandbegantopassdocuments tohisNKVDcontroller.In1937KittyHarris,borntopoorRussianparentsinLondon’sEastEndand brieflybigamouslymarriedtoAmericancommunistleaderEarlBrowder,assumedthisrole.Sheand Macleanconcludedtheirfirstmeetinginbedtogether,andthereafterforsomemonthsconductedan affair.ThefollowingyearhewaspostedtoParis.RobertCecil,whohadknownMacleaninhis youngerdaysandwasnowanembassycolleague,thoughthisdemeanourhadbecomeuneasyand hesitant,incontrasttohisearlierself-assurance.AtthetimeCecilwasbemusedbythechange,but muchlaterheidentifieditasreflectingguiltaboutMaclean’sdoublelife.Thehandsomeyoung diplomatwasbynomeansuniversallyliked:typistsreferredtohimdisdainfullyas‘smarty-pants’. NonethelessMelindaMarling,anAmericangirlwhomMacleanmetinParis,gaveaglowing accountofhimtohermother:‘Heissixfoottall,blondewithbeautifulblueeyes…Heisthesoulof honour,responsible,asenseofhumour,imagination,cultured,broadminded(andsweet),etc.’InJune 1940shefoundherselfpregnantamidthechaosofFrancebeingoverrunbytheGermans.Thesetwin shockscausedhertobrushasideearlierreservationsaboutmarryingMaclean.Afterahastywedding, theywereevacuatedtoBritain.MelindathensailedforNewYork,wheretheirfirstchildwasborn– andswiftlydied.Onlyintheautumnof1941didshereturntolivewithDonaldinLondon.Itseems almostcertainthatfromanearlystagetheleft-leaningMelindawasawarebothofherhusband’swork forMoscow,andofhisbisexuality. TheenforcedaccessionoftheSovietUniontothestruggleagainstHitlerliftedthespiritsofthe WesternspiesservingMoscow.NowthatBritainandRussia,andsoonafterwardsalsotheUnited States,werefightingthesamefascistfoes,suchpeopleasMacleancouldpersuadethemselvesthat passinginformationto‘UncleJoe’wasnobetrayal,butinsteadmerelyameansofassistinga commoncause.In1942alone,thedocumentshestoleorcopiedfromtheForeignOfficefilledfortyfivefilesintheNKVD’sMoscowarchives.Maclean’srichcropincludedmuchmaterialabout Britain’srelationswiththeSovietUnionanddetailsofBritishpositionsinnegotiationsandbefore summitmeetings.InApril1944hewaspostedtotheBritishembassyinWashingtonasfirstsecretary, whereheplayedtenniswithLordHalifax,andraisedhisgameasapurveyorofAnglo-American secrets.ThestrainoflifeasaspyandbisexualshowedinMaclean’sincreasingconsumptionof alcoholandlapsesintouglyscenesunderitsinfluence.Buthisintelligenceandcharm,leavenedwith ForeignOfficeandclasssolidarity,enabledhimtokeepbothhisjobandhisroleastheSoviet Union’smostimportantsourceonWesternforeignpolicy. AnthonyBlunt,avicar ’ssonbornin1907andeducatedatMarlborough,wonamathematics scholarshiptoCambridgeandlatertookaFirstinforeignlanguages.Thereafterhebecameadonand anembryoarthistorian.Bothhishomosexualityandhisleft-wingsympathieswerewellknown–his friendGuyBurgessmayhavebeenresponsibleforrecruitinghimtotheNKVD.Butin1939neither politicsnorsexualityprovedabartohisjoiningtheIntelligenceCorps,withwhichheservedfor somemonthsinFrance.FindinghimselfhomelessafterDunkirk,hebecameatemporaryLondon lodgerofVictorRothschildofMI5,throughwhomGuyLiddellrecruitedhimtothesecurityservice. Bluntwonimmediateplauditsasanintelligenceofficer,especiallyforhisdexterityinexamining thecontentsofneutraldiplomaticbags.AnMI5secretaryofthetimelaterrecalled:‘MyGod,hewas acharmer!PoorAnthony!WewereallabitinlovewithAnthony,youknow…Heusedtowander aroundwithhiscod-liveroilandmalt,saying“That’swhatTiggerslikeforbreakfast.”Heknew WinniethePoohverywell.HehadaLeslieHowardface–amatineeidol–aratherthinanddrawnlookingfacebutitwasthefaceofLeslieHoward.EveryonewasinlovewithLeslieHowardatthat time.’OnseveraloccasionsBluntwassenttorepresentMI5atmeetingsoftheJointIntelligence Committee,andin1944hewassecondedtoSHAEFtoworkondeceptionplanning.Inhisparallel NKVDroleherecruitedandranasasub-agentLeoLong,whoworkedinmilitaryintelligence.Blunt providedastreamofMI5documentsandsomeUltradecrypts,includingsignalsrelatingtothe1943 battleforKursk,thesubstanceofwhichhadbeenconveyedtoMoscowthroughBritishmilitary channels.HealsobriefedtheRussiansabouttheactivitiesoftheTwentyCommittee,whichran ‘turned’NaziagentsinitsmasterlywirelessgamewiththeAbwehr. Harold‘Kim’Philby,mostnotoriousoftheCambridgegroupbecausehegainedaccesstothemost sensitivesecretsandhistreacheryultimatelycostmostlives,wasthesonoftheArabistscholarSt JohnPhilby,anobsessivepersonalitywhototteredontheedgeofinsanity.Theelderlysagedeclared, forinstance,thatHitlerwas‘averyfineman’,andin1940becameconvincedoftheinevitabilityof Britishdefeat,whichcausedhimtobebrieflyinternedinIndia.AfterWestminsterandCambridge,the NKVDgavePhilbycareercounselling:getintonewspapers,saidArnoldDeutsch,whichwould provideanidealplatformforhisMoscowwork.Duringthelater1930sPhilbybecameawellregardedjournalist,servinginSpainduringitscivilwarasacorrespondentforTheTimesaswellas anagentoftheNKVD,whodoubledhisnewspaperincome.Philby’spersonalextravagancemade Russia’scashasimportanttohimasthepleasureofassuaginghisclosetcontemptforBritainby servingitsenemies.Peopleofpowerandinfluencelovedhimasthemostcongenialofcompanions: hewassponsoredformembershipofLondon’saugustAthenaeumClubbythemilitarytheoristBasil LiddellHart.AjokethatpleasedPhilbymightilywasthatFrancothefascistawardedhimSpain’sRed CrossofMilitaryMerit,thoughin1937theRussiansbriefedhimtogatherintelligencetofacilitate Franco’sassassination. Thereafter,however,duringthePurgesandtheperiodoftheNazi–SovietPacthefoundhimself droppedasabruptlyasweremanyotherNKVDinformants.Hisoffersofnewmaterial,forwardedto MoscowthroughDonaldMaclean,werespurned.HewasobligedinsteadtobusyhimselfasaTimes warcorrespondentwiththeBritishExpeditionaryForceinFrance.PhilbywasappointedtoMI6in 1940,afterexpressinganinterestinanintelligencecareertooneoftheservice’stalent-spotters, HarrietMarsden-Smedley.ValentineVivianwasafriendofStJohnPhilby,andcheerfullyaccepted theoldman’sassurancethathissonhadforsworndalliancewiththeleft.Kimstartedhiscareerwith Britishintelligencebylecturingontechniquesofsubversivepropagandatoforeignexilesrecruited toSOE.Heoftenopenedhisflamboyanttalksbyurginghisaudiences,manyofwhomrecognised StalinandHitlerasmatchingmonsters:‘Gentlemen,Ihavenowishtopreventyoublowingupthe Russians,butIwouldbegyou,forthesakeoftheAlliedwareffort,toblowuptheGermansfirst.’ PhilbywontheaffectionaswellasthewarmapprovalofBroadwaycolleaguesandchiefs,andin October1941waspromotedtoheadtheIberiansectionofMI6. TheRussianshadrenewedcontactwithhimninemonthsearlier,buthisinitialreportsaboutlifeat Broadwayearnedtheirscorn.HeassertedthattheSovietUnionstoodonlytenthonMI6’spenetration targetlist,anincrediblepropositiontoCentre,whichwasconvincedthattheexistentialpurposeofthe BritishsecretservicewastoachievethedestructionoftheSovietUnion.Russia’sleadersinhabiteda societyinwhichnobilityofconductwasalien,indeeddangeroustothestate.Theywerethusunableto creditthefactthatforthewar ’sdurationeventhemostimpassionedanti-communists,including Churchill,hadsetasidetheirhostilitytothroweverythingintothestruggleagainsttheAxis.Thiswas emphasisedin1940whenWalterKrivitsky,theformerNKVDresidentinHolland,defectedtothe Americans.On23January,MI5debriefedhimatLondon’sLanghamhotel.Krivitskydescribed almostahundredSovietagentsinEurope,sixtyofthemworkingagainstBritishinterests,including sixteenwhowereBritishsubjects.YetMI5,overwhelminglypreoccupiedwiththeNazimenace,felt abletocommitonlyasingleofficertoinvestigateSovietpenetration,anditisthusunsurprisingthat hefailedtoidentifyanunnamedBritishjournalist,mentionedbyKrivitskyashavinghelpedthe NKVDinSpaintoplanFranco’sassassination,asKimPhilby. Moscow’sinterestwasreawakenedbyPhilby’sappointmenttoheadtheIberiansection.Thereafter heprovidedCentrewithalmostathousandwartimesecretdocuments,channelledthroughAnatoly Gorsky,nowreappointedasNKVDresidentattheSoviets’Londonembassy.Shortandfat,Gorsky wasacaricatureStalinistwhosemercilesschillrousedtherepugnanceoftheCambridgespies, thoughinsufficientlysotoputthemofftheirwork.Atthisstage,Philby’smostsignificant contributionwastofuelSovietparanoiaabouttheprospectthatBritainwouldmakeacompromise peacewithHitler,throughtheagencyofDeputyFührerRudolfHess.Thiswaspuremischief-making, presumablydesignedtoraiseitsagent’sstandingwithCentre.Inthesamespirit,Philbyreportedthat hisMI6mastershadabandonedaplantokillAdmiralCanarisononeofhisfrequentvisitstoSpain, allegedlybecausetheBritishanticipatedthathemightbecometheintermediaryinbilateral negotiations. InsideBroadwayBuildings,Philbyaffectedanold1914–18armytunicofhisfather ’s.Withhis stammer,shabbyclothesanddiffidentmannerheseemed,inRobertCecil’swords‘likeoneof GrahamGreene’sseedyanti-heroes’.YetMalcolmMuggeridgewarmedtoanapparentfellow-free spirit:‘Hisromanticvenerationforbuccaneersandbuccaneering,whatevertheideologicalbasis–if any–mightbe.Boozers,womanisers,violenceinallitsmanifestations,recklessnesshowever directedhefoundirresistible.’PhilbyoncetoldMuggeridge,inafamiliarhalf-self-mockingkey,that Göbbelswasamanhefelthecouldhaveworkedwith. Philby’squalitiescommandedanextravagantpremiuminsideBroadway:HughTrevor-Roper foundhim‘anagreeableandeffectiveperson…intelligent,sophisticatedandevenreal’.The historianwashatedbymanyofhiscareercolleaguesbecauseheneverconcealedhiscontemptfor them,butPhilbyflatteredandcaressedthem.TheconsequencewasthatTrevor-Roperthepatriotwas mistrusted–repeatedlythreatenedwithdismissalandoncewithaprosecutionfortreason,for conveyingdetailsofBroadway’sfailingstoLordCherwell–whilePhilbythebetrayersecuredhis masters’absoluteconfidence. CommontoalltheCambridgeFivewasadisdainforloyaltynotmerelytocountry,butalsoto familyandfriends.In1935Philbyrifledhisownfather ’spapersonNKVDorders.Hemademuchof hisrelationshipwithanoldWestminsterschoolfriend,TomWylie,inhopesofexploitingWylie’s roleasaWarOfficeofficial.GoronwyReesbrokecontactwithCentrefollowingtheNazi–Soviet Pact,anideologicalbridgetoofarforhim.DonaldMacleanspatatRees:‘Youusedtobeoneofus, butyouratted!’Thewriterpromisedtheothertraitorsthattheirsecretremainedsafewithhim,and kepthisword,anunedifyingmoralcompromise.Burgess,however,remainedfearfulofRees’s knowledge.Inthespringof1943heurgedhisSoviethandlerthathisfriendshouldbemurdered. WhenMoscowdismissedthissuggestionasaclumsyBritishprovocation,atameetingwithGorsky on20JulyBurgessofferedtokillReeshimself,whichwasalsothoughtsuperfluous. CentreoftensoughttopressmoneyonitsBritishagents.Mostprofessedscruples,declaring themselvesenthusiastsforanidealratherthanmercenaries.AnthonyBluntoncesurprisedhishandler bydemanding,andreceiving,£200forsomeundisclosedpersonalpurpose.Hesignedareceiptfor thecashwhichthereafterreposedintheNKVD’sfiles,muchtothesatisfactionofCentre:thelong, lean,boundlesslydeviousarthistorianwasthuschainedtoitsoar.Meanwhile,Philby’slifestylecould onlybesustainedbyanincomefromMotherRussiaaswellasfromMI6. Asisoftenthecasewithdoubleagents,bothsideshadmomentsofdoubtabouthisloyalty.In November1942StuartHampshire,oneoftheRadioIntelligenceBureau’sOxforddons,producedan importantreportonthepowerstruggletakingplaceinGermanybetweenHimmlerandCanaris. Philbysecuredabanonitscirculation,withoutgivingareason.ThiscausedHampshiretosay thoughtfully,‘There’ssomethingwrongwithPhilby,’thoughneitherhenorhiscolleaguescould figureoutwhat.Longafterwards,theyconcludedthatKimwasprobablyunderordersfromMoscow tostifleanyinformationthatmightencouragetheBritishtotalktoGermanoppositiongroups.Atthe time,HughTrevor-RoperwassoannoyedbyPhilby’sbehaviourthathegaveacopyofHampshire’s documenttoLordCherwell,whichearnedhimyetanotherformalreprimandfromMenziesand ValentineVivian.Hewasorderedtowriteaformalapologyforcommunicatingwiththeprime minister ’sadviser,ratherinthespiritofaschoolmasterpunishinganerrantchildbyimposing‘lines’. MeanwhileinMoscow,atexactlythesametimeElenaModrzhinskaya,oneoftheNKVD’smost respectedanalystsandanobsessiveconspiracytheorist,urgedthatalltheCambridgeFivewerepart ofaBritishplot,‘aninsultinglycrudecapitalistprovocation’.Thisseemedthemorecrediblesince threeofthegroup’searlyhandlers–Deutsch,TheodoreMalyandAlexanderOrlov–hadalready beenbrandedastraitors.ModrzhinskayacomplainedthatthecontentofthecopiesofMI6’ssignalsto theBritishembassyinMoscow,passedtoCentrebyPhilby,werefartoobanaltobeauthentic.The RussiansneverabandonedtheirconvictionthattheirowncountryteemedwithBritishspies.An NKVDreportof30October1945stated:‘TheEnglishintelligenceorganstookadvantageof improvedopportunitiesduringthewarandintensifiedtheespionageagainsttheSovietUnion.Atotal ofaround200BritishagentsworkedintheUSSRduringthewar,ofwhich110wereinMoscow,30in Murmanskandover20amongvariousdelegations.’Thiswasanexquisitefantasy.MI6hadlacked anyMoscowstationsince1936,andtheBritishambassadorvetoedaproposaltoestablishone. Bycontrast,inthecourseof1941theNKVD’sLondonstationforwardedtoMoscow7,867British classifieddocuments,715onmilitarymatters,fifty-oneonintelligence,127oneconomics,andthe restonpoliticalorothertopics.Asimilartrafficflowwassustainedthroughthelaterwaryears.To preservethesecurityblanketoversources,insideCentrealmostalloriginalmaterialwasdestroyed afterbeingtranslatedandparaphrasedbydeskstaff.Suchwasthebulk,however,andsoseverethe shortageofEnglishlinguists,thatthousandsofpagesweredispatchedtotheincineratorsunexamined. YuriModin,oneofsevenMoscowdeskstaffchargedwithhandlingthismountainofmaterial,later reflectedsardonically:‘Whatwould[thespies]havethoughtiftheyhadknownthattheirtelegrams andreportshadbarelya50percentchanceofbeingread?’WhenPhilbyprovidedanaddressbookof Britishagentsinfar-flungplaces,theNKVDbrusheditaside:itschiefswantedonlymaterialabout MI6activityincountrieswhereMoscowhadexplicitinterests. ButsomeoftheBritishspies’reports,trueandfalse,foundtheirwayintotheKremlin.Atypical missivefromCentretotheUSSR’sStateDefenceCommitteewasdated21April1942:‘Thisistopass ontoyoutheinformationfromanagent,whichNKVDoftheUSSRhasreceivedfromLondonasa resultofconversationsbetweenthesourcesandanofficialfromtheAmericanembassy(“Gilbert”) andanumberofMPs.1.OnTheSecondFront.Ithasbecomeclearthat…apartfromactive opponentsofChurchillwhothinkheissabotagingtheopeningoftheSecondFrontfromhishostility towardstheUSSR,thedelayisbeingviewedfromtwoangles:Politicalaspect:thereisdisagreement amongmembersofthegovernmentastowhenoffensiveoperations[aninvasionoftheContinent] shouldstart…ManyofthosewhoknowChurchill,includingLloydGeorge,saythatheremains hauntedbythefailureoftheDardanellescampaign[in1915]whenhewasblamedfortheGallipoli disaster…Accordingto“Gilbert”…only4Britishdivisionshavehadspecialisedamphibious training.’Thisreport,whichcontinuesatlength,isnotmuchdifferentinstyle,accuracyand usefulnessfromroutinediplomaticandforthatmatternewspaperreporting. AsimilarNKVDreportfromLondon,dated28July1942,wasbroadlysoundinsubstance,but quotedsomerisiblesources:‘OurfixedagentinLondonsentthefollowinginformation,obtainedby anagent.MostofficialshaverecentlybeenassertingthattheSecondFrontwillnotbeopenedthis year.SuchpeopleasLadyColefax–theagent-informantoftheConservativeParty’sexecutive committee…arenowdeclaringwithalmostcompleteassurancethattheSecondFrontwillnot happen.’SibylColefaxwas,inreality,ameresocialalpinistandconspicuouslyfoolishwoman,of whomacontemporaryjokesuggestedthatshescrawledononeofherluncheoninvitations‘tomeet themotheroftheUnknownSoldier ’. MeanwhileDonaldMacleantoldMoscowthatPoland’sGeneralWładysławSikorskidismissedtalk thattheKatynmassacresofPolishofficerswereNaziwork,sayinghewasconfidentthattheyhad beencarriedoutbytheNKVD,asofcoursetheywere.AnthonyBluntwarnedthatthePolish governmentinLondonwouldneveraccepttheproposedredrawingofitscountry’sborders.Thiswas oneoftheBritishmessagesthatappearstohavehadsomeinfluenceontheKremlin,confirming Stalininhisdeterminationtospurnthe‘LondonPoles’andcreatehisownpuppetregime.TheMI5 officeralsoprovidedMoscowwithausefullistofBritishsourcesrecruitedamongthepersonnelof exileEuropeangovernmentsinLondon. TheRussiansreceivedmuchinformationthatwasplainwrong,andreflectedonlytheirobsession withsupposedconspiraciesagainstthemselves.Forinstance,on12May1942‘areliablesource’ reportedtoMoscowthatanofficialfromtheGermanembassyinStockholmhadarrivedinLondon aboardaSwedishaircraftbearingpeaceproposalswhereby:‘Englandwillstayintactasanempire. TheGermanswillwithdrawtroopsfromCzechoslovakiaandrestoreitsoldborders.AllEastern Europewillberestoredtoitspreviousborders.TheBalticstateswillalsoremainindependent.After EnglandacceptstheseconditionsGermanywillreachanagreementwiththeUSSR.’TheRussians assumedtheworstaboutadmittedlymuddledAnglo-AmericanpolicyinYugoslavia.On28March 1943anNKVDsourceinAlgiers–possiblyanOSSinformant–messagedalmosthysterically:‘In collaborationwiththeAmericanstheEnglishhaveinstructed[General]Mihailovićnottojoinany activeoperations[againsttheGermans],butinsteadtobuildstrengthandmaterielandmakehisarmy ascapableaspossible[foroperationsagainstTitoandhiscommunistpartisans].TheEnglishand AmericansarehelpingMihailovićdespitebeingwellawareofhislinkswiththeGermans…In parallelwiththistheEnglishhavedecidedtoexploitallopportunitiestocompromiseMarshalTito. AmongotherthingstheyareusingtheneutralSwissmediaforthispurpose.’ MoscownursedarunninggrievanceabouttheBritishrefusaltoforwardtothemrawUltra recrypts.ThemodernRussianintelligenceofficialwebsiteassertsasfactin2015:‘Althoughthe BritishintelligenceservicewasgettingreliableinformationoftheplansofGermanarmyleadership attheEasternFront,theEnglishpreferredtokeepthisinformationsecretfromtheirSovietally.It wasthroughagentsamongtheBritishsecretservicethattheSovietforeignintelligenceservicedid acquirethisinformation.’YetYuriModinadmittedthatLondonhadreasononitsside.TheRussians werethemselveshauntedbyfearsofNaziagentsinsideSovietheadquarters–includingtheNKVD– whichwereprobablyunjustified,butcosttwosuspectgeneralstheirlives. InMay1943,MI6createdanewSectionIX,taskedtostudycommunismandSovietespionage, thoughitsstaffwasauthorisedtoworkonlywithsuchmaterialascouldbegatheredoutsidethe SovietUnion.InaccordancewithChurchill’ssterndiktat,nopenetrationactivitieswerecarriedout– notthatthesecouldhaveachievedmuchanyway.WhenanEstoniannamedRichardMaasingwas debriefedbyMI6,Philbydisplayedakeeninterest,unsurprisingtoposterity:hewantedtodiscover whowereMaasing’scontactsinterritoriesclaimedbytheSovietUnion.EarlyinJuly1944,MI6’s LisbonstationreceivedsomewarningoftheHitlerbombplotfromOttoJohnoftheAbwehr.Philby wasinsistentthatthisreporthadnosignificanceandshouldbe‘spiked’–almostcertainlyforthe familiarreasonthathisMoscowordersobligedhimtodoeverythingpossibletofrustrateAllied intercoursewiththeGermanResistance.AftertheAbwehrofficerPaulVehmehren’s1944defection inIstanbulandsubsequentdebriefing,PhilbypassedtotheRussiansVehmehren’slonglistofCatholic conservativecontactsinGermany:allthoseintheEastwereliquidatedbytheRussiansin1945–46,as actualorpotentialanti-communists. Moscow’ssuspicionsofPhilbynonethelesspersisted,intensifiedbyanepisodeintheautumnof 1943.HesuppliedtohishandlersacopyofasupremelysensitiveUltradecryptofasignaltoTokyo fromtheJapaneseembassyinBerlin,detailingBaronŌshima’s4OctoberconversationswithHitler andRibbentrop.TheversionwirelessedtoMoscowomittedtheconcludingparagraph,because Bletchleyhadonlyacorruptedtext.WhentheNKVDsecuredfromanothersourceacopyofthesame signal,butincludingthemissingsectionwhichdiscussedapossibleseparatepeace,Fitin,thechiefof theFirstDirectorate,assumedthatPhilbyhaddeliberatelyomitteditfromhisdeliveryonBroadway’s orders.Moreover,alltheCambridgeFiveweredamnedbytheircontinuingfailuretoprovidedetails ofthenon-existentBritishspyringsintheSovietUnion.On25October1943CentretolditsLondon residencythatitwasplainPhilbyandhisfriendsweredoubleagents.Itdispatchedeightmento Londonwithanexplicitbrieftosecureconfirmationofthis,byshadowingtheirmovements.Since noneofthenewcomersspokeEnglish,the‘tailing’operationagainsttheNKVD’sownsourceswas lessthansuccessful. OnlyinAugust1944wasthereachangeofheartinMoscow,arenewalofbeliefthatthe CambridgespieswereservingSovietratherthanBritishinterests.CentrewrotetoitsLondonstation thatnewevidenceaboutPhilby‘obligesustoreviewourattitudetowardshimandtheentiregroup’, whowere‘ofgreatvalue’.InMoscowandLondonalike,rivalemployersnowclamouredforhis services.HisoldnewspaperTheTimesstrovetopersuadehimtoreturntojournalism;oneofits seniorexecutivescharacterisedhimas‘steady,experiencedandwise’.Philbydidindeedconsider suchacareerchange,butinsteadcontinuedonhispathofsecretdevastationatBroadway,facilitated bythedisastrousdecisionofStewartMenziestoappointhimtoheadMI6’santi-communistespionage section.‘C’s’protégérewardedhiminhisowninimitablefashion,byspendingmanyhoursatMI6’s StAlbansout-station,photographingthefilesofitsagentsforMoscow’sedification. Longafterwards,followingtheexposureofPhilby,BurgessandMaclean,andamidatidalwaveof recriminationsagainsttheintelligencecommunityforadmittingsuchmentotheircouncils,Hugh Trevor-RoperreflecteduponboththeirrecruitmentanditscosttoBritishinterests:‘If[Philby]had beenturneddownasanex-communist,andneverafterwardsexposed,ourfashionableleft-wingers wouldhavedenouncedhisexclusion,justastheynowdenouncehisappointment,asaninfamous exampleofsocialandintellectualdiscrimination…Until1944IdonotbelievethatPhilbyhadmuch opportunity,ormuchneed,todoharm.HisworkwasagainsttheGermans,inSpain,whereRussia waspowerlessand,bynow,uninterested.Hehadnoaccesstopoliticalsecrets.Anywaytheinterestof theRussianswas,atthattime,thesameasours:thedefeatofGermany.’ PhilbythenwrotefromhisMoscowrefuge,commentingonTrevor-Roper ’sremarks,andbitter stricturesagainsthim:‘Inotethatyouabhortreason.SodoI.Butwhatistreason?Wecouldspend manydaysmotoringaroundIraqanddiscussingthiswithoutgettingmuchneareragreement.’ Trevor-Roperresponded,‘“Whatistreason?”Yougailyask,and,likejestingPilate,donotwaitfor answer…Toserveaforeignpower,eventospyforaforeignpower,doesnotseemtome necessarilytreason.Itdependsontheforeignpower,andtheconditionsofservice…Buttoserve unconditionally,toequatetruthwiththereasonofstateofanypower,thattomeistreasonofthe mind;andtomakethissurrendertoaformofpowerthatiscynical,inhuman,murderous,thattome istreasonoftheheartalso.’ SomeofMoscowCentre’sofficersretaineddoubtstothebitterendabouttheloyaltiesofthe Cambridgespies.ElenaModrzhinskayaattendedPhilby’s1988funeral,inordertoviewhisopen casket.ShewashauntedbysuspicionsthatevenindeaththeBritishtraitormightsomehowhave achievedalastdeceit.WhateverthedefiantclaimsofPhilbyandhiskintohavetakenprideinserving Moscow,thealcoholismandprematuredecaywhichovertookallsaveBluntsuggestthattheyfound littlecontentmentintreason.OnPhilby’sarrivalinMoscowhewascrestfallentodiscoverthathe lackedanyNKVDrank–nomereforeigninformantwasgrantedone.Trevor-Ropersaidhebelieved thatPhilbyhadenjoyedhissupposedtriumphoverbourgeoiscapitalismlessthanhepretended:‘Did JudasenjoytheLastSupper?Idoubtit.’ SirDickWhite,laterheadofbothMI5andMI6,wrotetoafriendaftertheCambridgespieswere exposed:‘Onbalanceitwasnotsuchabadbettofightthewaronaunitedfront.Thecostwastohave hadBluntin[MI]5,Philbyin[MI]6andB[urgess]andM[aclean]intheF.O.Ontheothersideofthe equationamassiveintakeofbrainandabilitiesfromtheUniversitieswhichsetentirelynewstandards ofintellectualachievement.’Thiswasanextremepost-factorationalisationofadisasterforthe reputationofBritain’ssecretservices.YetWhitewasthusfarright:thatBritain’swareffort,notto mentionitsstandingasabastionoffreedom,wouldhavebeenmuchthepoorerhadeveryofficer withaleft-winghistorybeenexcludedfromitsinnercouncils. HowmuchdamagedidthetraitorsdotoBritishinterests?Untilthelatewartimeyears,thelikely answeris:notmuch.ForlongperiodsMoscowrefusedtobelievethattheBritishweresostupidasto allowavowedcommunists–albeitsupposedapostates–accesstotheirdeepestsecrets.Probablythe mostsignificantcontributionoftheCambridgeFive,andexplicitlyofDonaldMaclean,wastokeep StalininformedaboutBritishpoliticalanddiplomaticintentions;animmensevolumeofcabletraffic concerning–forinstance–Anglo-AmericanweaponsandsupplydeliveriestotheUSSRwasalso passedtoMoscow.TheRussians’defaultdiplomaticposturetowardstheWesternAlliesofstonefacedindignationsuccessfullyconcealedfromWashingtonandLondonthefactthat,atsummit meetings,theSovietdelegationwasfullyinformedinadvanceofintendedBritishandAmerican positions.Churchillespecially,whooftenawaitedapprehensivelyStalin’sresponsetounwelcome surprises,especiallyaboutdelaystoD-Day,mighthavesparedhimselfdiscomfort.The‘surprises’ werenothingofthesort:theSovietdictatormerelybrilliantlysimulatedamazement,thenunleashed angertoorder.ItwasimpossibleforChurchillandRoosevelttoplaypokerwiththeKremlin,because Stalinknewtheirhands.Meanwhile,itisknownthatAnthonyBluntatMI5handledmanyJapanese Purpledecrypts,anditislikelythathegavesometotheRussians,evenifIzumiKozo’smaterialdid notenablethemtobreakthecipherontheirownaccount. ApologistsfortheCambridgespiescitesomeoftheaboveindefenceoftheirmen.Philbyandthe rest,theyargue,gaveaidnottoBritain’senemies,buttoitsforemostallyinthestruggleagainst Nazism.Wasitnotshameful–acauseforrighteousangertopeopleofconscience,todayasinthe 1940s–thatBritaindidsolittletoaidRussiainitsdesperatehour,andevendeniedMoscowaccessto Ultra,theforemostweaponinChurchill’shands?Thefirstanswertosuchadefenceisthatthetraitors providedinformationtoMoscowlongbeforeRussiabecameanally,indeedwhiletheSovietUnion wascoupledtoNaziGermany,fromAugust1939toJune1941,aperiodthatembracedsuchtriumphs forMoscowCentreastheKatynmassacres.Evenafter‘Barbarossa’,whenBritain,Russiaandlater theUSwerejoinedinthestruggleagainstHitler,Stalinneverwaveredinhisperceptionofthe WesternAlliesasultimatefoes.ThetreacheryofPhilbyandhisfriendslatercostthelivesofmany goodmenandwomen,executedforthemerecrimeofresistingtyranny. Meanwhile,BletchleyParkwasthemostsecretorganofBritishwar-making.Thedangerwas enormousthatonceitsdoingswereknowninMoscow,aleak–perhapsthroughacompromised Russiancode–wouldalerttheGermanstoEnigma’svulnerability.Thefactthatthisdidnothappenin nowayexcusestheconductofthosewhorevealedtheUltrasecrettotheKremlin.TheRussianswere careless,orworse,withthesecretsofothers;itshouldberememberedthat,whileStalinwasstill Hitler ’sfriend,theSovietambassadorinWashingtontoldhisGermancounterpartthattheJapanese Purplecipherwasbroken.ThemostthatcanbesaidaboutPhilbyandhiskinisthatitwasfortunate allofBritain’ssignificantwartimetraitorsgavetheirallegiancetotheSovietUnion,thelooming menacetofreedomanddemocracy,ratherthantoNaziGermany,itspresentdanger. 2 A M ER I C A NTR A I TO R S TheUnitedStatesisatempleoffreedom,andthusalsoofindiscretion.EvenafterPearlHarbor, Americansfoundithardtoadjusttotheimperativesofsecurity,toshakeoffhabitsacquiredover centuries.Operationalpilotsgossipedovervoicelinks;politiciansandserviceofficersdiscussed plansovercocktails;newspapermenandbroadcasterschafedagainstcensorship,andpublished informationofvaluetotheenemy–mostnotoriouslytheChicagoTribune’s1942revelation,reprised byWalterWinchell,thatUStriumphatMidwayhadbeengainedbybreakingJapanesecodes– whenevertheythoughttheycouldgetawaywithit.Theeasternseaboard’sblazingilluminations, whichpersistedforweeksafterthe‘DayofInfamy’,muchtotheadvantageofU-boatcaptainswho sankscoresofmerchantmensilhouettedagainsttheirglare,weresymbolicofmuchelsethatmightbe magnificent,butwasalsoperilous,inanationatwar. FortunatelyfortheAlliedstruggleagainsttheAxis,GermanspieswholandedonUSsoilwere roundedupwithlittledifficultybypoliceandtheFBI.TheJapaneseenjoyedaslittlesuccess intelligence-gatheringinAmericaastheydidnearerhome.TheSovietUnion,however,exploitedthe opensocietytosponsorespionageinsidetheUnitedStatesonascaleunmatchedbyanyothernation. The1950sallegationsofSenatorJosephMcCarthy,whopromotedawitch-huntinaclimateof hysteriaandparanoia,wereunfoundedagainstmanyindividuals,buthadsubstanceinthegenerality. HundredsofAmericansofleft-wingsympathies,andasmallernumberwhoworkedforcash, systematicallybetrayedtheircountry’ssecretstoMoscow.Theatomictraitors,tobediscussedlater, havebeenthefocusofmuchhistoricalattention,whiletheRussians’hostofotherwartimeinformants havereceivedlessnoticethantheydeserve.NKVDandGRUsourcesinWashingtonwereprivyto someofthenation’smostsensitivepolicydebates. Untilthepost-warera,theFBIhadnegligiblesuccessinidentifyingAmericantraitors,andtheguilt orinnocenceofsomehigh-profilesuspectsremainsunproventothisday.Asearlyas15July1941a StateDepartmentofficialwrote:‘AmpleevidenceexiststhatAmericancommunistsaretaking advantageofthepresentsituationtoattempttoingratiatethemselvesinhighgovernmentcirclesas advocatesofdemocracyundertheguiseofadvocatingall-outaidtotheSovietUnion.’FBIattention, however,focusedmorecloselyontheUSCommunistPartythanonSovietagent-runners.Thereare sheavesofreportsintheWashingtonarchivesconcerningAmericancommunistsympathisers,but untilthelater1940stheFBI’ssurveillancetargetswerealmostallpeopleatthelowerendofsociety– dockworkers,tradesunionactivistsandsuchlike.TheFBIbreathedheavilyuponsuchbodiesasthe NationalCouncilofSoviet–AmericanFriendshipandEastEuropeanexpatriateandnationalist groups.ItheldabulgingfileontheNationalMaritimeUnion’sallegedsubversiveactivities.Ithad onesuccessagainsttheSovietUnioninApril1941,whenitsecuredtherecalloftheNKVD’sNew YorkstationchiefafterFBIagentsarrestedhimatameetingwithaninformant,butthiswasthetipof ahugeiceberg,invisibletoJ.EdgarHoover. ThewartimeFBIclaimedknowledgeofjustfiveAmericancitizensspyingforRussia,while subsequentrevelationsandconfessionsidentifiedatleastanothereighty.The1948Venonadecrypts providedcodenamesfortwohundredRussiansourcesintheUS,ofwhomhalfremainunidentifiedin thetwenty-firstcentury.SincetheVenonamaterialcoveredonlyapartofMoscow’soperations,itis reasonabletoassumethatinthe1930sand1940sthereweremanymoreAmericantraitors,aview supportedbythememoirsofcontemporaryNKVDandGRUofficerswhoservedintheUS. IntheFBI’sdefence,Hoovercouldpleadthatthenation’sdeclaredenemies–Germany,Italyand Japan–enjoyednosignificantespionagesuccesswithinthecontinentalUnitedStates.AfterJune1941 theRussianswereAmerica’sprofessedalliesratherthanfoes,andPresidentRoosevelthimself treatedthemwithtrustandrespect.ApologistsfortheBureau’sfailureagainsttheNKVDmightsay thatthismerelyreflectedawidernaïveté,extendingtothesummitofUSgovernment,aboutthescale ofthemenaceposedbytheSovietUnion.TheFBIalsofacedsomeofthesameproblemsasdid AbwehrandGestapomenhuntingtheRedOrchestra:mostofthesignificantplayersinhabitedupper- middle-classsocialandprofessionalcircles,wherelawenforcementagencieswereunaccustomedto tread. Aselsewhereintheworld,theNKVD’sAmericanoperationsbecamealmostmoribundbetween 1939and1941,andmostofitsUSsourcesbecameperforcesleepers.Thefirstattempttoreactivate networksfailedwhenArnoldDeutsch,rehabilitatedanddispatchedtobecomeUSstationchief, appearstohavedrownedwhenhisshipwassunkinmid-Atlantic.InDecember1941,Itzhak Akhmerovwasappointedinhisstead.HehadservedintheUSsincearrivingtherein1934under coverasastudent,andashetoldanaudienceofKGBtraineestwentyyearslater,‘switchingfromthe statusofaforeignstudenttothestatusofanAmericaninsuchalargecityasNewYorkwasnot difficult’.AfteratimehemovedtoBaltimore,whichwashandierformanaginghisWashington sources.HeandanotherNKVDofficersettleddowntorunafurrier ’sshop,whichprovedsuccessful initsownright,turningagoodprofitaswellasprovidingcover;buthehadindifferentsuccess recruitingnewinformants,arolethatothersfilledbetter. TheNKVD’sthreeacknowledgedstations–attheSoviets’AMTORGtradeorganisationinNew York,theWashingtonembassyandtheSanFranciscoconsulate–wereeachmannedbythirteen intelligenceofficers,supportedbyothersatsub-stationsinLosAngeles,Portland,Seattleand elsewhere.ScoresmoreagentsworkedundercoverofSovietfrontorganisations–theTASSnews agency,Sovfilmexport,theRussianRedCrossandsuchlike;someAmericanmaterialwasalso channelledthroughtheNKVD’sMexicoCitystation.ItmightbesupposedthatSovietspies,arriving fromthemostrepressiveandausteresocietyonearthattheirusualfirstportofcall,NewYorkCity’s Tafthotel,wouldbedazzledbyAmericanwealth,glitz,glamour,inexhaustibleenergy.Yet remarkablyfew‘wentprivate’–defected–andeventhosewhowrotememoirslongaftertheTerror endedsaylittleornothinginpraiseoftheUS.Mostseemtohavelivedandworkedinagreycocoon ofRussiannessandsocialistrectitude. Sovietespionagewasoftenafamilybusiness.WhenAlexanderFeklisovleftMoscowforanNKVD postinginNewYork,hehadthecustomaryfarewellmeetingwithforeignministerMolotov,who expresseddismaythathewasabachelor:‘Wedon’tsendsinglemenabroad,especiallytotheUSA. Theywillimmediatelyfoistabeautifulblondeorbrunetteonyou,andahoneytrapwillbeready.’ Feklisov’sbossreassuredMolotovthatthereweresomegoodRussiangirlsservingatSoviet institutionsinNewYork,andabridecouldbefoundamongthemforthenoviceagent.In1944the dutifulFeklisovindeedmarriedaRussianstudentsenttostudyatColumbia. ItzhakAkhmerovdidwedanAmerican–butshewasHelenLowry,nieceofUSCommunistParty leaderEarlBrowder.WhenVasilyZarubin,freshfromparticipationintheKatynmassacresof25,000 Poles,leftMoscowtobecomeWashingtonstationchiefinDecember1941,hetookwithhimhiswife Elizabeth,herselfanNKVDcaptain,whoplayedanimportantroleasrecruiterforherhusband’s network,andwhooftentravelledtoCaliforniatomeetRobertOppenheimerandotherusefulcontacts. Shepassedeasilyasasophisticated,cosmopolitanEuropeanwoman,equallyfluentinEnglish, German,FrenchandHebrew.Shecamefromafamilyofrevolutionaries,andwasoneofCentre’s mostruthlessoperatives.HavingcutherteethworkingasacaseofficerfortheterribleFelix DzerzhinskyaftertheRevolution,shewaspostedtoTurkey.Thereshegaveimpressiveproofof loyaltytoBolshevismbybetrayingherthenhusband,YakovBlumkin,anotherSovietagent.Hehad beenentrustedwiththesaleofMoscow’sHasidicLibrary,andrashlygavesomeoftheproceedsto Trotsky,whowasthenexiledinTurkey.AlmostbeforetheechooftheshotsfromBlumkin’sfiring squadhaddiedaway,hiswidowmarriedZarubin.Forthirteenyearsthereafterthetwotravelledand spiedtogetheracrossEurope.InAmerica,ElizabethplayedherrolesoskilfullythattheFBIidentified herasacareerintelligenceofficeronlyin1946,afterherreturntoMoscow.Sheandherhusband meanwhileplayedapivotalroleinCentre’sglobalespionageprogramme.BeforeOctober1941, StalinhadtakenlittlepersonalinterestintheUS–thoughalwayseagertostealitstechnology– becausetherewasnodirectclashbetweenSovietandAmericaninterests.Now,however,itspolicies becameatoppriority:StalinmetpersonallywithZarubinbeforehedepartedforhisAmerican posting,tourgeitsimportance. ThenewNKVDresidentwasforty-sevenwhenhearrivedinNewYork.HissubordinateAlexander Feklisov,whoidolisedZarubinasagiantamongSovietspies,describedhimthus:‘Hewasof mediumheight,slightlyoverweight,withthinfairhairwhichhebrushedback.Heworeglassesina whitemetalframe,andhiseyeswereforeverinflamedfromoverwork.Hewasimmenselystrong, verygoodattennis,fulloflifeandanobviousleaderinanycompany.Helovedsingingandplayed severalmusicalinstruments…Hespokequicklyandhisvoicewassomehowtrumpet-like,thoughhe wasalsoagoodlistener,easyandfriendlywithsubordinates.Hedemandedtheyshouldshow initiative,boldness,evenrecklessness.Hederivedhisstrengthfromhisimmenseexperienceand professionalism,thoughhecouldsometimesbeindiscreet.Hehadallkindofconnectionsamong foreigners,andwasagreatrecruiter.Hehandledourmostimportantagentspersonally.’Feklisov omittedtomentionthatZarubin,asecretservantoftheSovietstatesince1925,wasalsoaruthless killer,thoughthisdidnotsparehimfromhimselfoncefeelingthewarmthoftheexecutioner ’s breath.AtameetingBeriainvitedhimtostand,thensaid,‘TellusaboutyourlinkstotheFascist intelligenceservices.’Zarubinsternlyrejectedtheslander–andsufferednoconsequences.Butthose whowitnessedthescenelefttheroomtrembling.ZarubindominatedSovietespionageintheUnited Statesuntilhisexpulsionin1944. IntheUSasinBritain,theCominternprovidedafigleaftospareinformantsfromthediscomfort ofacknowledgingthattheyweregivingsecretstoaforeignpower.Thoseinvolved,saidtheIowanbornMarxistwriterJosephineHerbst,‘tookgreatprideintheirsenseofconspiracy’.Amongearly recruitswasHaroldWare,aradicalNewDealerintheAgricultureDepartment,killedina1935car crash.AttheStateDepartmenttheGRUsecuredtheservicesofAlgerHiss,whiletheNKVDfromthe mid-1930sreceivedasteadystreamofinformationfromNoelFieldandLaurenceDuggan.Thelatter wasapoliticalromantic,muchinfluencedbyhisformidablewifeHelenBoyd,whomaRussian describedas‘anextraordinarilybeautifulwoman:atypicalAmerican,tall,blonde,reserved,wellread,goesinforsports,independent’.HeddaGumpertz,aGermanexileandpassionateanti-Nazi workingfortheNKVD,hadcultivatedDugganasafriendofField.Dugganwasoncehandeda birthdaypresentbyhisSoviethandler:amonogrammedcrocodiletoiletriescase.Herejecteditinthe samespiritthatsomeoftheBritishtraitorsdeclinedmoney,‘statingthathewasworkingforour commonideasandmakingitunderstoodthathewasnothelpingusforanymaterialinterest’. TheRussiansprofitedfromthinkinglong.SincetheSovietUnionsawitselfinahistoric adversarialrelationshiptotheWesternPowers,itsrulerswerecontentforagentstospendyearsin trainingandorientationfortheirroles.SemyonSemyonov,forinstance,wasashort,stockyfigure withaducknoseandbigeyes,whorubbedalongeasilywithpeopleandcouldpassforamiddle-rank corporateexecutive.InJanuary1938,agedtwenty-six,hewassentatMoscow’sexpensetodo advancedstudiesattheMassachusettsInstituteofTechnology–theNKVDintendedhimtobecomea scientific-technologicalintelligenceofficer.AtMITtherewerecomplaintsthatSemyonovwaslazy andconceited,butheprovedanadeptwhenhestartedhiscareerasanagent.By1943hewasrunning twenty-eightAmericansources,elevenofwhomprovidedmaterialonchemistryandbacteriology, sixonradio,fiveonaviation.Amongthemorenotablewasthirty-three-year-oldHarryGold,bornin SwitzerlandtoRussianrefugeeparents.GoldcametoAmericaasaninfant,andstartedspyingforthe Sovietsinhisfirstjob,wherehestoleadry-iceprocessthatstoppedicecreammelting.In1942he abandonedhisdayjobasachemisttomanagehisownagent-runningoperation,meetingSemyonov onceaweektoarrangeassignments. CentrewasuneasythatsomanyofitskeyWashingtonsourceskneweachother,mostlythrough linkstoleft-winggroups,butcoulddolittleaboutit.Onemanwhomighthaveexposedtheextentof itspenetrationintheUSwasIgnatzReiss,anNKVDofficerwhoquitandfledforhislifeduringthe Purges.Hisemployerscaughtupwithhim,however,inaLausannerestauranton4September1937. Hewasshotnearby,hisbodydumpedbytheroadside.Thisprovedausefulexecution,forotherspies whoconsideredwithdrawingtheirservicestendedtodroptheideawhentheyrememberedReiss’s well-publicisedfate.MaybetheyalsoknewaboutJulietPoyntz,anAmericaninformantwhodecided toleavetheSoviets’employ,butinsteadvanishedfromtheNewYorkWomen’sClubon3June1937 andalsoappearstohavebeenliquidated. ThoughsomeAmericanleftists’faithinthesocialistdreamwasshakenbytheNazi–SovietPact,it wasrenewedinfullmeasureby‘Barbarossa’,whichthrewuponRussiathechiefburdenofdefeating Hitler.WhenAlfredSlack,aninformantworkingatEastmanKodak,wasoffereda$150bonusforan unusuallyusefulpieceofinformation,hetoldhishandlertosendthemoneytoMoscowforthe ‘JosephStalintankcolumn’,apopularfundofthetime.SemyonSemyonov,theagentinquestion, solemnlygaveSlackareceipt,tokeepalivetheflameofhisillusions. Others,however,shamelesslysoldsecretsforthemoney.Semyonovlikedtotellthestoryofan AmericanchemistatDuPontwhopassedtheRussiansmaterialonnylonandexplosives,withoutany pretenceofideologicalmotive.‘Democrats,Republicans,fascists,communists,theyareallthesame tome,’themansaid.‘ImeetyoubecauseIneedcash.Ineedtobuildahouse,educatemydaughter, dresshernicelyandmakesureshemarrieswell.’Ateveryrendezvoustherewasprotractedhaggling betweentheRussianandtheAmericanaboutthevalueofhiswares,whichcustomarilystartedwiththe sellerdemanding$1,000,thentakinghometwoorthreehundred,togetherwithaburningindignation. SemyonovtoldhiscolleagueAlexanderFeklisovthathealwaysfeltexhaustedaftermeeting ‘Hustler ’,astheDuPontmanwascodenamed.IttooktheRussianhourstorecoverhissangfroid,as hedebatedwhethertheangryAmericanwouldseehimagain.Feklisovasked,‘Whynotpaytheguy more?’Semyonovanswered,‘Becauseifhebuyshishouseandsavesenoughmoney,hewillstop workingforus.’Asitwas,theirexchangescontinuedforyears. BycontrastLaurenceDugganoftheStateDepartment,whowashandledbyItzhakAkhmerov,did thebusinessforlove.InOctober1939,State’ssecurityofficerswarnedhimthathisloyaltywasbeing questioned,buttheyhadnoinklingofthemagnitudeofhistreachery,andafteracursory investigationhewasallowedtokeephisjob,becomingapersonaladviseronLatinAmericato CordellHull.InJuly1944DugganresignedfromStateandjoinedtheUNreliefagencyUNRRA. Fouryearslater,afterbeingquestionedbytheFBIhejumpedfromthesixteenthfloorofhisoffice building,buteventhentheauthoritieswereobliviousoftheimportanceofhisNKVDrole,revealed onlybythe1990openingofaMoscowarchive.ArthurSchlesinger,whoknewandlikedDuggan, wrotelongafter:‘Onewonderswhatimpulsesofidealismmayhaveinextricablyentangledthis decentmanwiththeharshmachinationsofStalinisttyranny.’SomeofthosewhospiedforMoscow remainedunidentified.‘C-11’,awomansourceintheNavyDepartment,ceasedproviding informationinthesummerof1940,whenthreatenedwithexposure.AnotherAmericanwoman, codenamed‘Zero’,whoworkedforaSenatecommitteeandpassedonreportsfromtheUS commercialattachéinBerlin,soughtworkintheStateDepartmentbutwasrejected,partlybecauseit wasreluctanttoemployJews.ShenonethelesssecuredtranscriptsofCordellHull’sconversations withforeignambassadors. TheSovietsalsohadplentyofdudsontheirpayroll.MarthaDodd,daughterofAmerica’s1933–38 Berlinambassador,wasrecruitedbytheNKVD’sBorisVinogradov,withwhomshefelldesperately inlove.EvenbySovietstandards,Centre’smanipulationoftheirrelationshiptouchedextremes:hours beforehisexecutionduringthePurges,VinogradovwaspersuadedtowritealettertoDodd,urging hertokeepspyinginexpectationofbeingreunitedwithhim.Hisdeathwasconcealedfromher,and shesustainedcontactwithherhandlersthroughthewaryears.AnNKVDreportasserted contemptuously:‘SheconsidersherselfaCommunistandclaimstoaccepttheParty’sprogram.In reality,however,“Liza”isatypicalrepresentativeofAmericanBohemia,asexuallydecayedwoman readytosleepwithanyhandsomeman.’Moscowwasinexceptionallycredulousmoodwhenitgave Dodd’sbrotherWilliam$3,000tohelphimbuyasmallnewspaper,theBlueRidgeHerald.By1945he wasworkingintheNewYorkofficeoftheTASSnewsagency,runbytheNKVDstationchief,and wasunderunsurprisinglycloseFBIsurveillance.MoscowgainednothingfromtheDoddsaftertheir fatherlefttheBerlinembassy. MichaelStraightwasanotherRussianfailure,arichyoungAmericanrecruitedbytheNKVD’s LondonstationchiefTheodoreMaly,supposedlyactingfortheComintern.Hissubsequenthandler, ArnoldDeutsch,dismissedStraightasadilettantewithmoremoneythansense,whooncewrotea chequefor£500tohelpfundthecommunistnewspapertheDailyWorker.Ontheyoungidealist’s returntotheUS,hesecuredajobwiththeStateDepartment.WhentheNKVD’sWashingtonstation expressedscepticismabouthisvalue,MoscowCentrecautionedsternly:‘Straightisprospectivelya bigagent,andburninghim…isnotourintention.’TheNazi–SovietPactcausedStraighttoresign fromtheStateDepartment–andfromtheNKVD.Henever,however,revealedtheknowledgehehad acquiredinLondonaboutthetreacheryofBluntandBurgess.TheRussians,cynicallyandperhaps correctly,believedthatthiswasnotoutofloyaltytotherenegades,butbecausethefateofIgnatz ReissshowedwhathappenedtothosewhobetrayedCentreoritsagents. SincetheUnitedStatesisanationofimmigrants,itwasimpossibletomonitorahostofsuch citizensasBorisMorros,borninStPetersburgin1891,whobecameaminor-leagueHollywood director-producer.TheNKVDrecruitedhimin1934,chieflytoprovidecoverforotheragentsrather thanasasourceofinformation.MorroshadthreebrothersstillintheSovietUnion:onewasexecuted afterincurringthedispleasureoftheParty,buthisownNKVDroleenabledhimtosavethelivesof theothertwo.In1944VasilyZarubindroveMorrostomeetMarthaDoddandherrichhusband AlfredStern,whomhepersuadedtoinvest$130,000intheproducer ’smusicpublishingbusiness. ThisnotonlyprovedapoorinvestmentforStern,butalsoawasteofeffortfortheNKVD,whogot littleornothingofvaluefromMorrosbeforehewasbelatedly‘turned’bytheFBIin1945.Likewise ‘Leo’,afreelancejournalist,provedaconmanwhoinventedintelligenceforcash,asdidNewYork congressmanSamuelDickstein,bornaLithuanianandcontemptuouslycodenamed‘Crook’,who nonethelessreceived$12,000ofSovietfundsbeforeMoscowdecidedhewasnotworthanymore money.TheonlysignificantserviceDicksteinperformedwastosecureaUSpassportforanAustrian NKVDagent.Hediedin1954,agedseventy,ajusticeoftheNewYorkSupremeCourtwhosework fortheSovietswasunrevealed. Moscowwasasvulnerabletosuchunrewardingsourcesaseveryotherintelligenceservice,butit couldalsoboastsuperbones.AlgerHissoftheStateDepartment,recruitedbytheGRUin1935,was bornin1904intoaprominentBaltimorefamily.Hesufferedachildhoodtragedywhenhisfather committedsuicide,butbecameabrilliantstudentatJohnsHopkinsandHarvardLawSchool.His wife,NewYorkwriterPriscillaFansler,wasaneageraccompliceinhisespionageactivities.In August1939HisswasdenouncedtoassistantsecretaryofstateAdolphBerlebyWhittakerChambers, aformerfellow-comrade.Thespynonethelesskepthisnerve,andhisjob.TheComintern’sresident hitmanOttoKatzexploredthemeritsofkillingChambers,andwasdeflectedonlybytheintended victim’swarningthathehadconcealeddocumentswhichwouldcriticallydamageSovietinterestsin theUSifanythinghappenedtohim.In1941,bothHiss’sfriendDeanAchesonandhismentorFelix Frankfurterassuredtheyoungmantheyhadcompletefaithinhim.Suchwasthereluctancetobelieve illofthisbrilliantdiplomatthatheroseonwardandupwardintheStateDepartment,servingwiththe USdelegationatthe1945Yaltaconference. BeforeeverymajorAlliedsummitofthewar,theNKVDbriefedtheSovietpolitburoaboutthe membersoftheAmericanandBritishdelegationsand–inPavelSudoplatov’ssmugwords– ‘indicatedwhethertheywereunderourcontrolasagents’.Thiswasagrossimplicitexaggeration: onlythreeorfourseniorAmericanandBritishdiplomatswereSovietsources.Butitwasindisputably truethat,thankstoStalin’swellwishersinWashingtonandLondon,heenteredeverysummit comprehensivelyinformedaboutthepolicypositionsofhisfellow-warlords.Ifthishelpedlittle towardsachievingvictoryovertheAxis,itcontributedsignificantlytosecuringRussia’sobjectivesin thepost-warsettlement. SudoplatovbelievedthatwhenHissbriefedtheRussians,hewasactingatthebehestofRoosevelt’s aideHarryHopkins.HopkinscertainlyprovidedimportantinformationtoMoscow.Hewarnedthe SovietembassythattheFBIhadbuggedameetingatwhichanNKVDofficerpassedcashtoan Americancommunist.HealmostcertainlybriefedCentre’sagentsaboutthesubstanceofthe Roosevelt–Churchillbilateralsummits,andprobablyaboutmuchmore.Thisshouldnotimply, however,thattheprominentNewDealerwasconsciouslybetrayingAmerica’ssecretstoanenemy; rather,hewascommittedtoseekingaworkingcollaborationbetweentheUSandtheSovietUnion. Hethought,asdidhismasterFranklinRoosevelt,thataparadeoftrustwasanimportanttooltowards achievingthis.Hopkinssaidwithoutembarrassment:‘SinceRussiaisthedecisivefactorinthewar shemustbegiveneveryassistanceandeveryeffortmustbemadetoobtainherfriendship.’The relativelyconfidingattitudeofhimselfandsomeotherprominentadministrationfigurestowardsthe Russianshelpedtomakesubordinatesfeeljustifiedingoingmuchfurther,betrayingundoubted secrets. Russian-bornWilliamWeisband,aknownpost-warSovietsource,servedinwartimeUSArmy signalsintelligence,latterlyatArlingtonHall,andisbelievedtohavepassedinformationfroman earlystage.TheOSSwasawashwithMoscowinformants.KarlMarzaniworkedinthegraphics department,JuliusJosephintheFarEastsection.OtherstaffersservingtwomastersincludedBella Joseph,DonaldWheeler,JaneZlatowsky,HorstBerensprung,HelenTennei,GeorgeWuchinich, LeonardMintz.TheNKVD’sOSSinformantsprovidedfarmorematerialthanCentre’sfive-manUS deskcouldtranslate.TheLatinAmericandivisionwasheadedbyaformerUniversityofOklahoma professornamedMauriceHalperin,whokeptacopyoftheDailyWorkerconspicuouslyonhisdesk, submittedreportsinstrictaccordancewiththeParty’sline,andworkedtirelesslytopromoteits interestsinthecountrieswithinhissphere.Hewaslesssuccessful,however,inwinningplauditsfrom Centre,whothoughtlittleofhismaterial.FranzNeumann,aneconomistintheGermansection, receivedhighermarksforpassingonavoluminousAmericanstudyoftheSovieteconomy.Noel Field,whoprovidedsomeassistancetoAllenDullesinBernwhileEuropewasoccupied,in1945 soughttopromoteaPartyagendathroughOSS.ArthurSchlesingerwrote:‘FieldwasaQuaker Communist,filledwithidealism,smugnessandsacrifice.Whatstruckmemostwashisself-righteous evasiveness…HesoughtnothingmorethanalifeofpiousdevotionontheothersideoftheIron Curtain.’ JuliusJosephandhiswifeBellabecameprimeMoscowsourcesonUSpolicytowardsChina, JapanandKorea.Evenfollowingthecouple’sacrimoniousdivorce,sostrongwasherloyaltytothe SovietsthatshedidnotexposeJulius.DonaldWheeler ’sNKVDhandlerwrotethat‘hetreatshisOSS colleaguesverycritically,andconsidersallempty-headed’.Wheelertookprideinhisowncontempt fortheriskofexposure,saying,‘Itmakesnosensetobeafraid:amandiesonlyonce.’Hepassedto theSovietsallOSSanalyticalmaterialonGermany,and–farmoredangerously–identified Donovan’sagentsinEurope,includingsomewhowereoperatingundercover.AftertheGerman defeat,WheelerfingeredaUSAirborneofficerwhowasengagedonasecretmissionintheSoviet Zoneofoccupation,toreportontheRussians’removalsofindustrialplant. ArthurSchlesingersaid:‘DonovanknewaboutsomeOSScommunistsbutnotperhapsabout others.’Thegeneralshrugged:‘I’dputStalinontheOSSpayroll,ifIthoughtitwouldhelpusdefeat Hitler.’ItisnonethelesshardtobelievehewasawarethathisownpersonalassistantwasaSoviet informant.DuncanLeeprovidedastreamofstrategicinsights,thoughtheUSgovernmentwould havegivensomeofthesetotheRussiansthroughopenchannels,forexampleLee’sMarch1944 warningthatD-DayhadbeendelayeduntilJune.HedidbetterserviceforCentrebywarningits agentsaboutsecurityprobes,includingoneonDonaldWheeler.Latein1944Leestartedaloveaffair withhisex-NKVDcourierMaryWolfePrice,secretarytothegreatjournalistWalterLippmannand thusherselfaconduitformanyprivilegedconfidences.ThisthoroughlyannoyedCentre,becauseit shiftedhispriorities.On3February1945theNKVD’sJosephKatzreportedtoMoscow:‘SawLee lastnight.Afterbeatinghischestaboutwhatacowardheis,howsorryhefeelsaboutit,etc.,hetold mehemuststicktohisdecisiontoquit…Inmyopinionthereisnosenseinusinghim.Heistotally frightenedanddepressed.Hesuffersfromnightmareswhereheseeshisnameonlists.’Katzhadtwo moremeetingswithLee,whosenervesweresoshreddedthathishandsshook.Theywouldhave shakenevenmorehadheknownthathisSovietvisitor–nottobeconfusedwithhisnamesakeOtto, alsoakiller–hadpersonallyliquidatedseveralinformantswhoseloyaltywassuspect.Lee,however, wasallowedtosurvive.InApril1945theNKVDsimplybrokeoffcontactwithhim. On25November1943,afifty-four-year-oldRussianJewnamedJacobGolosdiedofaheartattackin hisNewYorkapartment.Thiscausedpassionategrieftohisloveroffiveyears’standing,Elizabeth Bentley–andtoMoscowCentre,whoseforemostAmericannetwork-runnerhethenwas.Goloshad fledhishomelandasaBolshevikbackin1910,joinedtheUSCommunistParty,thengonehometo sharetheheadyjoysofRevolution.Later,however,heabandonedawifeandsonintheSovietUnion toreturntoAmericaasanintelligenceofficer.HebecameaUScitizen,andin1938tookupwith Bentley,astrappingthirty-year-oldex-Vassargirlwithaweaknessforleft-wingcausesandunusual foreignmen.Goloswasbusytrainingherintheartsofintelligenceworkwhenhehimselfwas arrestedasaspy–hardlysurprising,sincehewasaclosefriendofPartyleaderEarlBrowder.Buthe escapedwithashortsentence,and–amazingly–feltabletoresumehisactivities. GolosrecruitedhisfriendNathanSilvermaster,aveterancommunistwhobecameMoscow’smost importantAmericanconnection,andinturnsecuredtheservicesofHarryDexterWhite–‘Lawyer ’– andotherkeyWashingtonsources.JuliusRosenberg,muchlatersenttotheelectricchair,firstgave informationtoGolos.CedricBelfrage,aBritishjournalistworkingforSirWilliamStephensonin NewYork,wasanotherusefulcontact.JosephGregg,anofficialwhomovedtotheStateDepartment in1944,providedinformationabouttheUSArmyandNavy,andalsoforwardedFBIreportson communistactivityinCentralandSouthAmerica.Asignificantnumberofthenetwork’sinformants haveneverbeenidentified.In1943acommunistcodenamed‘Buck’andworkinginUNRRA,who reportedfirsttoGolosthentoSilvermaster,passedonasixty-five-pagereportontheUSmachinery industry,theninlateJune1945providedanagendaforUSpositionsatPotsdam.‘Arena’hadaccess toinformationfromthePentagon’smilitaryintelligencedepartment,wherehiswifeworked. From1940onwards,GoloswasobligedtosubjecthimselftotheForeignAgentsRegistrationAct, andsoonthereaftertoFBIsurveillance.NoneofthisinhibitedhiminsustaininghisNKVDcareer, usingElizabethBentley–‘Umnitsa’–tomakehiscontacts.Hisemployerswerehighlynervousabout him,however,andmaderepeatedattemptstopersuadehimtoreturnhome,verylikelyforexecution. Golosnotmerelyrefusedthesedemands,shruggingthathecouldnotgetapassport,butmadesure Centreknewthathehadtakenout,orratherhidden,alifeinsurancepolicy:asealedenvelope containingdetailsofMoscow’soperationsintheUS.TheSovietswereequallyunsuccessfulin persuadinghimtoturnoverhissourcestootherUSNKVDstations.GolostoldBentleythatnoother RussianintheUSunderstoodAmericansashedid.Thenheheardthatbackhomehissonhadjoined theRedArmy,andtalkedofwantingtojoinhim.Hetooktheconsiderableriskoftravellingto WashingtontomeetVasilyZarubin,towhomhecomplainedbitterlyaboutbeingaskedtotransferhis sources. Then,suddenly,hewasdead.Amidsthergrief,ElizabethBentleyremainedcoolenoughtodestroy thesealedenvelopeinasafedeposit,whichcontainedthesecretswithwhichGoloshadshielded himselfagainstavisitfromMoscow’sexecutioners.ItzhakAkhmerovassumedresponsibilityfor handlingher,andassuredCentrethatBentley,whomheliked,was‘onehundredpercentourwoman’. ButMoscowremaineduneasy,especiallyasheralcoholconsumptionrose.Sheshowedgrowing signsofstrain,andwailedthatsheneededamaninherlife.Eventually,underpressurefrom Akhmerov,sheturnedovertohimNathanSilvermasterandthushisgroup. SilvermasterwasborninOdessain1898,emigratedtotheWestCoastin1914,andwasforyears anactiveUSCommunistPartymemberbeforetakingajobattheUSTreasury.There,inMoscow’s interestsheforgedlinkswithastringoffellow-sympathisers,someofwhombecameblackcomicallymuddledabouttheirallegiances.FrankCoe,forinstance,complainedthathisworkloadas aSovietagentwashamperinghiscareerattheTreasury.Silvermaster ’ssourcesproducedmaterial fromalloverWashington.Therewasdataonmilitary-equipmentprocurementprogrammesandthe viewsofpolicy-makers,whichprobablycamefromHarryDexterWhite,asenioreconomistatthe Treasury.June1941broughtreportsontheWehrmachtfromtheofficeoftheUSmilitaryattachéin London.Moscowlearnedon5Augustthatata31JulyWashingtonlunch,navysecretaryFrankKnox betagainstMorgenthauoftheTreasurythatHitlerwouldhaveMoscowandLeningradinsidea month.HarryHopkins’sreporttotheWhiteHouseonhissummer1941visittoMoscowwasalso passedtoCentre,togetherwithanoteontheUScabinet’sdiscussionofAverellHarriman’smission totheSovietUnion. Intriguingthoughallthisgossipwas–andStalinhimselfreadsomeoftheSilvermastermaterial– theNKVDwantedmore.In1942theWashingtonstationwastoldtobriefitsmantodiscoverwhether theUSwasfulfillingitsLend-Leasepromises,andifnottoidentifythosemembersofthe administrationwhoblockedprogress.WhatwereAmericanintentionsaboutopeningasecondfront? Whatweretheadministration’sviewsaboutpost-warfrontiers,especiallythoseoftheSovietUnion? Wasthereanyevidenceoffifth-columnsabotageintheUS?Centrealsosoughtmoredetailonpolicy discussions.ItshighestprioritywastopenetratetheWhiteHouseandtosecureinformationfrom HopkinsandMorgenthau,becauseoftheirintimacywiththepresident. Meanwhile,CentrewasreceivinggovernmentmaterialfromRobertMiller,CharlesFlato,Harold Glasser,VictorPerlo,CharlesKramer,JohnAbt.HarryMagdoff,astatisticianattheDepartmentof WarProduction,deliveredastreamofdataonweaponsoutput.ItissurprisingthatMoscowdidnot runoutofcodenamesforitsAmericansources;thereweresomanythatitbecamenotunusualfor themtorunintoeachotherinthecourseoftheirofficialduties,sometimeswithknowledgeofshared disloyalties.Field,DugganandStraightcrossedpaths.AccrediteddiplomatandcovertNKVDhandler AnatolyGorskyfoundhimselfintheUSTreasuryDepartmentonedayinDecember1944,toreceive atrivialbriefingaboutGermanpostagestamps.HewasdirectedfirsttotheofficeofHarryDexter White,andthen–inWhite’sabsence–tothatofHaroldGlasser.BothmenwereSovietagents:White protectedGlasserfromasecurityinquiryabouthiscommunistlinks,thoughthetwomen’spersonal relationshipbecamestrainedwhentheirwivesquarrelled.Glasserconsidereditprudenttorejectan offeredpostonthetopdeckoftheStateDepartment,becausehewouldbeunlikelytosurvivethe securitycheckstheappointmentrequired.HewasnonethelessabletoprovideMoscowwithimportant cablesaboutUSpost-warpolicyplanning,includingdetailsofWashington’sviewsonfinancialaidto Russia.Inanambitiousmoment,VasilyZarubinsoughttotargetErnestHemingwayasaninformant, thoughhesuspectedhimofbeingaTrotskyiteratherthanaStalinist.Inanyevent,thewaywardwriter showednoenthusiasm. JustasathomeinRussia,withintheextendedSovietsecretfamilyinAmericadenunciationswerea wayoflife,andofdeath.InAugust1944theNKVD’snewresidentinSanFrancisco,Grigori Kasparov,signalledtoMoscowablisteringcritiqueofhiscounterpartinMexicoCity.Kasparov accusedhimofbunglingeffortstoliberateTrotsky’sassassin,RamónMercader,andofadoptinga ‘grandlifestyle’,whichincludedbreedingpoultryandparrots.Similarly,theNewYorkdeputychief claimedthathisownboss,twenty-eight-year-oldStepanApresyan,was‘utterlywithouttheknackof dealingwithpeople,frequentlyshowinghimselfexcessivelyabruptandinclinedtonag…Aworker whohasnoexperienceofworkabroadandcannotcopeonhisown.’Apresyanwasdemotedtothe SanFranciscoresidenceinMarch1945. TheZarubinswereundonenotbytheartificeoftheFBI,butbyadisgruntledsubordinatecolonel namedVasiliiMironov.Mironov’sfirstshotathischiefwastowritetoStalin,assertingthatZarubin wasdoublingfortheAxis.Whenthisgothimnowhere,hedispatchedananonymouslettertoJ.Edgar Hoover ’soffice,fingeringZarubinasaSovietspy,andalsonamingtenotheragents,including HollywoodproducerBorisMorros.DuringthewaryearstheBritishweretoofearfulofstraining theirdifficultrelationshipwiththeSovietstoexpelevenidentifiedSoviet‘illegals’,butin1944the AmericansinsistedontheZarubins’departure;boththeyandtheiraccuserwenthome.Thehusbandand-wifeteamreceivedaheroes’welcomeinMoscow;hewasloadedwithmedals,andendedhis careerasdeputychiefofforeignintelligence.MeanwhileMironov,surprisingly,wasallowedtolive –foratime.BackinMoscow,hewasdiagnosedasschizophrenicanddispatchedtoanasylum.While suchSovietinstitutionswerescarcelyhavensofcompassion,giventhedamagetheerrantcolonelhad inflicted,itisastonishinghewasnotshot.Hewaslessfortunatein1945,however,whenheattempted toinformtheUSembassyaboutSovietmassacresinPoland;thistimehewassilencedbyafiring squad. Inthespringof1942,asaknowncommunistNathanSilvermasterwasinvestigatedbytheHouse Un-AmericanActivitiesCommittee.Thisprovednothingagainsthim,thoughinJunetheUSNavy’s intelligencedepartmentinsistedonhisdismissalfromtheTreasury.Furtherinquiriesintohis politicalactivitieswerequashed–itisthoughtthatHarryDexterWhiteandanotherfriend,Lauchlin Currie,aCanadian-bornsenioreconomicadvisertotheWhiteHouse,intervenedonhisbehalf. AlthoughnothingwaseverprovedagainstCurrie,itseemsalmostcertainthathetoowasaSoviet informant.SilvermasterstayedinWashington,withanewjobintheFarmSecurityAdministration. Thoughthishadnoaccesstosensitivedefenceinformation,hepromptlybecameamemberofthe WarProductionBoard,whichdid. Moscow’sAmericansourceswerenothighlytrainedintelligenceprofessionals,butinstead enthusiasticamateurs.OverhalfofthehundredsofUSgovernmentdocumentsphotographedby WilliamUllmannin1944,forinstance,provedunreadablewhenCentre’smenporedoverhisfilms, forwardedbyElizabethBentley.Whatcouldbedecipheredwasimpressive,however;Ullmannwasa formerTreasurymandraftedtothePentagon,whosuppliedamassoftechnicaldataonUScombat aircraftandindustrialproduction.InMarch1945theimportantnuclearspyTedHallpassed informationoutofSantaFeonthedesignofAmerica’satomicbombwhichhehadcopiedontoa newspaper,usingmilkasink.TheRussiansfumedatsuchhamfistedness. MuchmaterialreachedMoscowoutofrealtime.AnexasperatedmemofromFitintoMerkulovin July1944complainedthatdocumentssuchasacopyofanAnglo-AmericanLend-Leaseagreement arrivedmonthslate,asdidaforty-one-pageTreasurymemorandumonpost-wartraderelations betweenWashingtonandMoscow,andadraftbyHarryDexterWhiteofanewUS-USSRLend-Lease deal.FitinsoughtauthoritytoshiftamanfromLosAngelestoNewYorktohandlethegroaning caseload.TheSovietswereevenmoreexasperatedbyemotionalcomplications:WilliamUllmann startedanaffairwithNathanSilvermaster ’swife.AkhmerovcomplainedtoMoscow:‘Surelythese unhealthyrelationsbetweenthemcannothelpbutinfluencetheirbehaviourandworkforus negatively.’HealsoreportedthatSilvermasterbulliedhissources.VladimirPravdin,nowthe NKVD’sNewYorkstationchief,urgedAkhmerovtoreininthewaywardspy.Akhmerovresponded bluntly:‘Themainthingistogetresults.Fortwenty-fiveyears,wecouldn’tgetinformationaboutthe politicsofthiscountry.Now[Silvermaster]isdoingatremendousjobandgivingourgovernmenta completepictureof[US]politicsonallquestions.’InAugust1944,FitinatCentrerecordedthatsince JanuarytheWashingtonnetworkhadhandedover386importantUSgovernmentdocuments.Hewas sufficientlyimpressedbytheSilvermasters’worktocontributea$6,000down-paymentonafarmthe couplewantedtobuy.NathanwasawardedaSovietdecoration,whichhewaspermittedtoglimpse beforehishandlerreturnedittosecretsafekeeping.ThevolumeofinformationpassedtoMoscowby allitsAmericannetworksrosespectacularlyinthecourseofthewar,fromfifty-ninereelsof microfilmin1942,to211in1943,sixhundredin1944and1,896in1945,withtheSilvermasters amongthemajorcontributors. HowdidtheRussiansgetawaywithsomuchforsolong?Mostcitizensofdemocraciesacceptthat partofthetariffimposedforfreedomisthattheirdefencesagainstsubversionandtreacheryareless comprehensiveandeffectivethanthoseofatotalitarianstate,andsuchapriceusuallyseemsworth paying.YettheFBI’sincompetencewasastonishing.ItsagentschargedwithmonitoringSoviet activitiesshowedthemselveslessthanastute.AlexanderFeklisovwroteinhismemoirs:‘Therewere manygreenyoungmeninthe[FBI’s]footsurveillanceteams…andourofficersexposedthemby usingsimpletricks.Tailswereprobablyselectedfromyoungmenrearedinsmalltowns,whowould startworkingagainstusaftertwoorthreemonths’training.Onecouldseestraightawaythatthey wereprovincials–bytheirclothes,theguilty,larcenouslookintheireyes;theirclumsiness.Theyfelt lostwhentheyrealisedthattheyhadbeenspotted,anddidn’tknowwhattodo.Theywouldturnaway, orwalkquicklyintothefirstbuildingtheysaw.’ Feklisovsometimeswalkedstraighttowardshistail,forthefunofseeingthemanfleebeforehim inembarrassment.Surveillanceishighlylabour-intensive,requiringback-upcarsincaseasuspect grabsabusortaxi.‘Ioftenspottedfollowerswhengettingintothesubwayorstandingonthe platform.TheyweresoscaredtheywouldlosemewhenIboardedatrainthattheyalmostrandown thestairs.Onceontheplatform,Inormallychoseaspotwhereitwashardtoseeme:behindapillar, bythewall,inthecrowd.Therewereoccasionswhentheonlypeopleinaquietsubwaystationwere myselfandthetail.InsuchcasesInormallytriedtothinkaboutsomethingnice,smiledandhummeda popularAmericantunewhilepacingalongtheplatformwithacarefreelook,toshowthatIpaidno attentiontothesurveillance.Thetailsdressedmodestly,mostlyindarkdullsuitsandovercoats.In summertheymostlyworetheirshirtshangingout,withnotie.OnoneoccasionIwaswatchedbya teamoffour.Oneofthemworearmyuniformforhalftheday.Isawhimontheescalatorinthe metro,thenhefollowedmeintotheCunardWhiteStarofficewhereIbookedsteamshipticketsfor SovietcitizenstravellingtoLondon.Isawthis“soldier”yetagainwhenlunchingatacafeteria.’ Hoovercouldfireonlyonecounter-chargeagainsthismoreskilfulandsubtleBritishcounterparts: hisownBureauwasneverinfiltratedbyaSovietagent,aswasMI5. TheRooseveltadministrationapparentlyagreedabouttheFBI’slimitations.InJuly1941the Soviets’Washingtonambassador,KonstantinUmansky,reportedtoMoscowanemotionalappealby HenryMorgenthau.Thetreasurysecretarysaidthathewasasking‘notonbehalfoftheAmerican government,butonmypersonalbehalf’thatiftheRussiansknewtheidentitiesofkeyGermanagents intheUS,theyshouldprovidethemtohimselfandthepresident,‘sincetheFBIworkspoorlytoday …leavingthecoreofNazileadersfreeandstillcarryingontheirunderminingwork’.AMoscow Centrehandscrawledexclamationandquestionmarksonthiscable.Morgenthaurepeatedthesame demandtoUmansky’ssuccessor,MaximLitvinov.EarlyinMarch1942Moscoworderedthe ambassadortorejectanyrequestsforintelligencecooperation:‘TheNKVDoftheUSSRisnot interestedinestablishingthisliaison.’Inthesummerof1944,andpartlyinresponsetoconcernabout thesecurityoftheManhattanProject,theFBIplantedwiretapsinallknownSovietheadquarters buildings,throughwhichtheylearnedagoodmanycodenames,togetherwithindisputableevidence ofItzhakAkhmerov’sintelligencerole.Hewasdeclaredpersonanongrata,andwenthometoreceive ahero’swelcomeinMoscow.HewaspresentedwiththeOrderoftheRedBanner,andhiswifeHelen withtheRedStar. BytheendofthewarCentrewasconvincedthatElizabethBentleywaschronicallyunstableanda menacetotheirUSoperations,especiallyaftersheformedafriendshipwithamanwhowasplainly anagentofeither‘theHut’–theFBI–or‘theArsenal’–theUSWarDepartment;inreality,itwasthe former.CentredecideduponherkidnappingandextractiontoMoscowforliquidation.Itwastoolate: shewasalreadysingingalongariatoHoover ’smen,newsthatwasconveyedtoheremployersby KimPhilby.Inapost-mortemontheGolos–Bentleysaga,Centreconcludedthatitwasaserious mistaketohavealloweditsagenttoforgelinkswithmembersoftheAmericanCommunistParty,and tobecome‘themainpillarofourintelligenceworkintheUS’.Itwasextraordinarythataspyso carelessastomeetinformantsintheirownapartments–asdidBentley–escapedexposureforso long. ThesameargumentsareadvancedtoexcuseAmerica’scommunisttraitorsastheirBritish counterparts:thatitisscarcelysurprisingsomanyliberalssoughttoassisttheSovietUnion,whenthe institutionalbarbarityofStalin’sregimewasinadequatelyunderstood,andRussiansborethe overwhelmingburdenofthestruggletodefeatfascism.AstheEastGermanspychiefMarkusWolf laterputit,Moscow’sinformantsconsideredthemselvesmembersofanelitesecretclub,fightingfor anobleideal.PierreCot,aformerministerinseveralFrenchgovernmentslivinginexileintheUS, undertookalong1944missiontoMoscowfordeGaulle.Heconcludedhissubsequentreport: ‘Libertydeclinesunceasinglyundercapitalismandrisesunceasinglyundersocialism.’Aremarkable numberofAmericanandBritishintellectualslikewiseembracedthisidiotjudgement.From1941to 1945,RussianswerethealliesoftheUnitedStatesinthegreatestconflictinhistory. Inresponse,however,itmaybearguedthatfewinformedpeople–whichincludedalmostallthe Americanspies–couldhavefailedtobeawareofthehorrorsoftheSovietsystem,hadtheychosen tomakethemselvesso.Apologistsalsoarguethatthetraitors’actionshadnoadverseimpactuponthe AlliedcauseintheSecondWorldWar.Thatisonlynarrowlytrue:recalltheSovietleaktothe GermansabouttheAmericanpenetrationofPurple.ThosewerestillthedaysoftheNazi–SovietPact: Hitler ’semissarypassedonthismomentouswarningtotheJapanese.BaronŌshimamessaged Japan’sforeignministerfromBerlinon3May1941–adispatchsubsequentlybrokenbythe Americans–sayingthat‘itisquitereliablyestablished[bytheGermans]thattheU.S.governmentis readingAmbassadorNomura’scodemessages[fromWashington]…drasticstepsshouldbetaken regardingthismatter ’.ThefactthatTokyowasfoolishenoughtotakenoheeddoesnotalterthe gravityofthethreattoUSinterests.ItisalsovirtuallycertainthattheRussiansacquiredthisvital secretfromoneoftheirAmericaninformantsintheupperreachesoftheadministration.Thisman mayhavesupposedthatbybriefingMoscowhewasmerelyaidingtheinternationalsocialistcause.It wasonlybyamiracle,however,thathisactiondidnotcausetheUStoloseitsaccesstoPurple. ArthurSchlesingerwroteinhismemoirs:‘ThereisnoevidencethattheinformationOSSmoles gavetheKremlindidmuchdamagetotheUnitedStates.ThediscoverythatOSSwasnotplanning subversiveoperationsagainsttheSovietUnionmaywellhavesoothedStalinandreducedanychance ofhismakingaseparatepeacewithHitler.’Here,thehistorianmakesavalidpoint:Sovietpenetration oftheorganisationwouldhaveinflictedseriousdamageatthetimeonlyifMoscow’sagentshadbeen passingintelligencethatshowedtheUnitedStatesdouble-crossingitssupposedally–whichwasnot thecase.YetatnotimeduringtheSecondWorldWardidStalinentertainanynotionofsustaining peacefulco-existencewiththeWesternPowersonceitwasended.TheAmericanandBritishtraitors didsubstantialharmtotheirownnations’interests,byensuringthatWashingtonbargainedwith Moscow–forinstanceatYaltaandattheUnitedNations’foundingconferenceinSanFrancisco–ata seriousdisadvantage:SovietdelegationsknewpreciselywhereAmericanandBritishfinalpositions lay. TheAmericanswhogavetechnologicalandscientificdatatotheSoviets,ofwhommorebelow, didgreaterharmtotheirownnation’sintereststhanthosewhomerelypeddledpolitical,diplomatic andstrategicinformationduringthewaryears.MostoftheRussians’immenseinvestmentin espionageintheUSachievedlittle.ThebestthatcanbesaidoftheAmericanswhoservedtheircause isthattheyweremonumentallynaïve–theRussianscertainlythoughtso.TheUSinformantswho workedsoenthusiasticallywithVasilyandElizabethZarubinmighthavesuppedlesseagerlyhadthey seenthebloodstainedfootprintsthatmarkedeverystepoftheirpathsfromMoscowtoWashington DC. 15 TheKnowledgeFactories 1 A GENTS Britain’sintelligenceservicesemployedhundredsofimpressivelydeterminedandcourageousyoung fieldagents,ofwhomtheNorwegianOlufReed-Olsenmaystandasanexemplar.InSeptember1940, agedtwenty-two,heescapedtoBritainfromhisownoccupiedcountrybycrossingtheNorthSeain aneighteen-footboat,survivingextraordinaryhazardsandtempestsduringthetwo-weekpassage. ThereafterhespenttwoyearsasapilottraineeinCanada,andflewseveraloperationsforRAF CoastalCommandbeforeacceptingatransfertoagenttraining,inthecourseofwhichhebrokeboth legsparachuting.InApril1943theplanecarryinghimtoNorwaytwiceturnedback,becausewind speedsweredeemedtoohighforajump.Thethirdtime,heinsistedonmakingthedescent,landedin atreetopandbadlydislocatedhisknee.ThiscausedhimtospendamonthinaNorwegianhospital, constantlyexposedtobetrayal,havingfluiddrainedfromtheinjury.Onbelatedlystartingintelligence work,hebrusheddisasterateveryturn.CarelessnesspromptedhimtouseEnglishphrasesinpublic places.HisBritishbriefershadknownnothingaboutnewregulationswhichrequiredhimtocarrya travelpermit.Hefoundithardtocreateanetworkfromscratch:‘Mostofthepeoplewhoatthattime werecapableofdoingajobefficientlywerealreadyuptotheirnecksinillegalactivityelsewhere…I wouldnotletanymanworkformeandinotherorganizationsatthesametime.Thiswasamistaketo whichfartoomanyfellvictims.’ Hewastedamonthbivouackedinawildernesswithtwocompanions,wirelessinghisAKYcallsign intonothingness,beforehissignalstoWhaddonHallreceivedanacknowledgement:‘PBO…PBO.’ Hethenspentthirtyminutestransmittingasituationreport:‘Thedifferenceitmadetoourspirits– afterourweeksoftoilandincreasingsetbacks–cannotbedescribed.Itwaslikeabreezeof encouragementblowingthroughalltheblackness.’Olsenandhiscompanionslivedforsometimeon semi-starvationrations–threeboiledpotatoesadaywithalittlebread,mackerelorherring.Poor dietgoesfartoexplainhowinjuredmeninthefieldoftenprovedvulnerabletosepticaemia.Only aftermanymonthsdidOlsen’steamreceivetheirfirstparachutedrop,ofwhichthemostvalued ingredientswerenotweaponsorexplosives,but270poundsofchocolate,5,000cigarettes,dried plums,apricots,apples.AlthoughtemporarilydrivenfromtheareabyaGermansweep,theywere fortunateenoughtoreturnlatertofindthesupplycacheundisturbed,inacaveamidthickwoodland. Secretwarriorsspentmuchoftheirtimepreoccupiedwithhumdrumsubsistenceactivities,rather thanwithcollectingintelligenceorblowingupbridges.Reed-Olsensometimesfoundhimselftoiling acrossamountainsidecarryinganeighty-poundload–anMI6transmitterweighedalmosthalfof that,withitsbatteries.Foragentsobligedtoliveinruralareas,ithelpedtobecountrywise:theyoung Norwegianwasoftenalertedtointerlopersbythecrosscallofastonechatorblackbird.Hismainjob wastomonitorandreportshippingmovementsandGermantroopdeployments.InOctober1943, afterweeksofplayingcatch-as-catch-canwithAbwehrdirector-findersmonitoringhiswireless transmissions,hewasobligedtofleetoneighbouringSweden.FlowntoLondoninJanuary1944,he tooktwomonths’leaveinCanadatogetmarried,beforebeingparachutedbackintoNorwayinMay. Thereafterhetransmittedlocalweatherreportsseveraltimesaday,andansweredsuchquestionnaires asthislateJulyexamplefromBroadway: 1.IsthereadivisionalstaffinArendal?Givenumber,HQandnameofCO. 2.IsthereaGrenadierregiment’sHQinKristiansandSouthand/orLyngdal?Givenumber,locationofHQandnameofCO. 3.ArethearmytroopsinMandalsubordinatedtoLyngdalorKristiansand? Thiscontinuedthroughsixmorequestionswithmultiplesub-headings. InthelastmonthsofthewarReed-OlsenwasabletorecruittwoGermandeserters,abandoningthe sinkingReich,toassistinaddressingsuchrequestsfromLondon.Hewaslatterlysuccessfulin evadingGermanDFunits,thoughtheseoftentauntedhimacrosstheethertorepeatcodegroups,and finallysent‘HEILHITLER!’inplainlanguage. Reed-Olsen,likehundredsofhiscomradesaroundtheworld,livedforyearsinperilofcapture andaghastlydeath.AttritionwasespeciallyhighintheLowCountries,wheretheterrainwasillsuitedtocovertactivity,informersweremanyandtheAbwehr ’scounter-intelligencebranchnotably efficient.Ofeighty-nineMI6agentsdispatchedtooccupiedBelgiumandHollandduringthewar years,thirty-ninewerecaptured,ofwhomjustelevensurvivedthewar.By1945,onlythirteenMI6 wirelessesremainedoperationalintheregion. MeanwhileinthemountainsofGreece,byJuly1944NigelClivewasusingtworadio-operatorsto processaconstantflowofmilitary,politicalandeconomicmaterial:‘Thegoodintelligencewewere receivingwasareflectionoftheskillanddeterminationofouragents.Theyhadtheadvantage, however,thatalmosteveryonebelievedthattheGermanswouldsoonbegone.Inthesecircumstances openopportunitieswereofferedtoouragentstoapproachthosewhowishedtohedgetheirbets.’ Clivewasconsciousofthetrivialityofmuchoftheinformation:‘IwouldbetoldthatAndreashad justbeenconscriptedbytheGermansintoalabourforceforbuildinganairstrip;thatEvangeloshad acousinwhosebrother-in-lawwasnowservingin[thecommunist]ELASagainsthiswillandwanted todefecttoZervas;thatMacros’suncleinIoanninahadheardthattheGermanswoulddefinitelybe outofGreecebeforethesummer;thatLeftherishadheardfromhissisterinArtathatEDESwas planninganattackonthetowninthefollowingweek…Ialwayslistenedpatientlytoeverythingthat wastoldmeandnaturallyassuredCostakisandotherswhoapproachedmedirectlythateveryscrap ofinformationwasofgreatvalue.ThiswastheonlydeceptionIpractisedandithelpedmetobe acceptedasamemberoftheircommunity.’ AftertheGermansquit,Clivesufferedasuccessionofunwelcomerevelations.First,hislabourson theenemy’sorderofbattlehadservednousefulpurpose.TheWehrmachtevacuatedGreeceofits ownvolition,withoutfightingabattleforwhichhisjigsaw-buildingmighthavebecomerelevant.He alsodiscoveredthatGermanknowledgemirroredhisown:thelocalenemycommanderLt.Gen. HubertLanz‘knewaboutuswhatweknewabouthim’,frominformersandinterception.Itwaseven morebewilderingfortheBritishagenttolearnthatZervas,theguerrillaleadertowhosegrouphe wasattached,hadbeenconductingparleyswiththeGermans,aimedatachievingacommonfront againstthecommunists.AsignalfromLanztohigherheadquarters,dated7August1944and eventuallypassedtoClive,spokeofZervas’s‘uptonowloyalattitude’–towardstheoccupiers. Finally,thespyfoundthathehadbeenthevictimofcynicism,incompetenceortreacheryhigherup theintelligencefoodchain:theheadofMI6’spoliticalsectiontoldhiminJanuary1945thatnotone ofhislongandoftenperceptivepoliticalreportshadreachedBroadway.Itwillneverbeknown whethertheseweresuppressedforideologicalreasonsbycommunistsympathisersinsidethe Service,especiallyinCairo,or–equallyplausible–lostamidthemorassofunreadpapergenerated bytensofthousandsofintelligenceofficersofallnations,atriskoftheirlives.Thatisnottosaythat fieldagentactivitywaswasted:DonaldMcLachlanofNIDpaidgeneroustributetothevalueofthe reportsofNorwegianship-watcherssuchasReed-Olsen,whowarnedofsomeenemymovementsand especiallyU-boatsailingsthatescapedUltra’snet,althoughitwasanothermattertoputthe informationtopracticaluse:throughoutthewartheRoyalNavyandtheFleetAirArmhadlittle successininterdictingScandinaviancoastaltraffic.AsforGermantroopdeployments,whetherin Norway,GreeceorelsewhereinoccupiedEurope,whileUltraprovidedagoodpicture,thiswas nevercomprehensive,anditwaseverywhereusefulforitscoveragetobesupplementedbymenon theground. BritishintelligenceneverachievedsignificanthumintpenetrationinsidetheReich.PlentyofantiNaziGermanswereeagertoescapetoAlliedterritory,butnotmanywereinterestedinreturningto Hitler ’sempirethereafterasspiesorsaboteurs.JohnBruceLockhartofMI6–nephewoftheoldspy Robert–wroteruefullyin1944thattherewere‘plentyofratsthatleavethesinkingship,andweshall getmore,butpreciousfewarepreparedtogobacktognawanotherholeinherbottom’.InItaly, BroadwayabandonedattemptstorecruitagentsfromamongItalianPoWs,becausethehuman materialavailableprovedsopoor.OnlywhentheAlliesbegantofightinsidethecountry,and partisangroupsprovidedrelativelysaferustichavensbehindenemylines,didBritishandAmerican officersoperatethereinnumbers.Moreover,notallMI6agentsoverseaswereasconscientiousas Reed-OlsenandClive:thenovelistGrahamGreenetreatedespionage,andindeedthewholewar,asan absurdity.HesignalledBroadwayfromFreetown,SierraLeone,in1942,proposingthattheservice shouldopenabrothelforVichyFrenchsailorsfromtheRichelieuonaPortugueseislandoffthe battleship’sbaseatDakar.FollowinghisrecalltoBritain,GreenejoinedMI6’ssub-sectionatSt Albans,runbyKimPhilby.ThoughthenovelistpersonallydislikedPhilbywhileheworkedwithhim, hetreatedhimwithindulgencewhenhewasrevealedasatraitor,asmerelyanothertraderina ridiculoussecretsbazaar. TheRussiansprovidedtheWesternAllieswithscarcelyanyinformationabouttheirownoperations, farlessthoseoftheAxis.Foratimetheygrudginglysuppliedcopiesofdecryptsoflow-level Wehrmachtcodestheyhadbroken,buton1December1942thisservicestoppedabruptly,andwas neverresumed.Inthespringof1944aRoyalNavymineandsabotageexpert,Lt.Shirley,wassentto theBlackSeatosurveyGermandemolitionsinrecapturedRussianportsbeforetheAlliesfacedthe problemofclearingcapturedFrenchharboursafterD-Day.When6Junecame,however,Shirleywas stillkickinghisheelsinSevastopol,vainlyawaitingRussianconsenttobeallowedtoinspectharbour installations. TheneedtosustainasemblanceofcollaborationcreatedotherdilemmasinLondon.Backin December1941,whenBritishhopesofanintelligencepartnershipwiththeSovietsranmuchhigher thantheystoodeighteenmonthslater,theNKVDdispatchedfourAustrianstoBritain,whomtheRAF weresupposedtodropbackintotheirnativeland.Thespiesarrivedonlyafterlongdelaysand adventures–oneman’sshipwassunkenroute,withthelossofhiswireless.Allcomplainedbitterly aboutthepoorqualityoftheirforgedidentitydocuments,andasecondsetsentfromMoscowproved nobetter.TheNKVD’sagentsflatlyrefusedtoundertaketheirmissionwithsuchpapers,andalso rejectedreturntoRussiaonthenotunreasonablegroundsthattheywouldbeexecuted.TheAustrians, whowereplainlyeagertosecurepermanentbilletsinBritain,toldtheirhoststhattheirmissionhad littletodowithdefeatingHitler:theywerebriefedinsteadtoformaComintern‘sleeper ’cell,to promotepost-warcommunistinterests.Whetherornotthiswastrue,theBritishfeltunableto frogmarchthemenaboardanRAFaircraftboundforenemyterritory.Yettheyalsoflinchedfromthe diplomaticstormthatmustfollow,ifthespiesweregrantedasylum.InApril1943,MI5’singenious andhumanesolutionwastodispatchthembacktoRussiaviaPanama,wheretheywereallowedto jumpshipanddisappear. Broadway’sactivitiesandstaffingexpandeddramaticallyinthecourseofthewar,withdepartments spillingoverintoanetworkofout-stations.SectionV,forinstance,grewfromastrengthofeightin 1940to250fiveyearslater.MI6’sseniorofficers,however,remainedlittlechanged,andHugh Trevor-Roperthoughtnobetterofthem:‘Acolonyofcootsinanunventilatedbackwaterof bureaucracy…Abunchofdependentbumsuckersheldtogetherbyneglect,likeaclusterofbatsinan unsweptbarn…Thehighpriestsofaneffetereligionmumblingtheirmeaninglessritualstoaverta famineorstayacataclysm.’AnofficerwhoservedinMI6notedthatitstopbrass,whoregarded themselveswithunflaggingseriousness,neverarrivedontimeforameeting:theyexcusedtheir unpunctualitybyimplyingthattheyhadbeenheldupattendingacabinetcommittee.Anintelligentand notunsympatheticobservertoldoneofMI6’sofficersthatinrecruitingpersonnel,‘wearetooready tobesatisfiedwithgoodsecond-raters’.Evenattheheightofaworldwar,theForeignOfficetreated theServiceas‘poorandratherdisreputablerelations’.Adiplomatcomplainedaboutthe‘lowsocial status’ofMI6’srepresentativesonhispatch,thoughthisreflectedmoreuponForeignOffice snobberythanontheagentsconcerned.Wastewasprodigious:Broadwaypurchasedanaircraftto scourthecoastofArgentinaforGermanshipping,animpossibletaskgiventhedistancesinvolved, andanywaydirectedagainstanon-existentthreat. AnobsessionwithsecuringadvantageinWhitehall’swarspersistedatBroadway,asinTirpitzüfer andMoscowCentre.MI6’sofficialhistorianwritesofClaudeDansey’sattitude,manifestedinhisrole supervisingtheescapeorganisationMI9:‘Hefrequentlygavetheimpressionthathisengagementwas asmuchtodenyanyothergovernmentdepartmenttheopportunitytomeddleontheContinentasit wastorescueBritishpersonnel.’OnedayDanseystrodeintotheofficeofPatrickReilly,thebrilliant youngdiplomatwhoservedforatimeasStewartMenzies’personalassistant.‘Greatnews,’hesaid. ‘Greatnews.’HisexultationwascausedbythecollapseofamajorFrenchagentnetworkrunbySOE, whomDanseyhatedevenmorethantheAmericans.Reillywrote:‘Misery,tortureanddeathformany bravemenandwomen,BritishandFrench:andDanseygloated.’Reillyrecordedthathehimselffelt sick. Menzies’personalsanctumwasguardedbytwovenerableladieswhoaddressedeachother,even afteryearsofsharedservice,as‘MissJones’and‘MissPettigrew’.Theformerwasthemilderand better-looking,whilethelatterwaslargeandformidable.Bothweredrawnfromthesameextensive stableoffemaleservantsofBroadway–genteel,loyal,discreet,tireless.MalcolmMuggeridge observed,surelyrightly,thatacommoncharacteristicofpeoplewhoserveintelligenceservicesisa delightinopacityforitsownsake,aconceitderivedfromaccesstoknowledgedeniedtoothers: ‘Thissenseofimportance,ofcherishingsecretsbeyondthekenofordinarymortals,was characteristicofSISpersonnelatalllevels,particularlythefemales,who,howevercarelessthey mightbeabouttheirchastity,guardedtheirsecuritywithimplacableresolution.’ In1943,RobertCecilsucceededReillyasMenzies’personalassistant,andthereafterbecamea sturdydefenderofhischief.‘C’s’mostimportantcontribution,hearguedyearslater,wastoensure thattheUltrasecretwaspreserved.TheSpecialLiaisonUnitswhichservedwithcommandersinthe field,createdbyBroadway’sFredWinterbotham,wereabrilliantsecuritydevice,saidCecil.Every Alliedcommander-in-chiefhadhispersonalSLU,livingapartfromtherestoftheheadquarters,and chargedwithfilteringdecryptssecurelyintotheintelligenceprocess.‘C’alsoretainedaclearsense ofthepurposeofhisorganisation’sexistence.Inamemorandumtohisstaffon10November1942, heexpresseditsrationale:‘allIntelligenceabouttheenemy,whethercollectedbysecretmeans,orby openfieldIntelligence,shouldbebasedontheolddictumthat“Intelligenceisthemainspringof Action”…SIS’sprimefunctionistoobtaininformationbysecretmeanswhichmayadmitofor promoteaction…Informationonwhichnoactioncanbetakenmaybeofinterest,itmaybeuseful forrecordsorforthefuture,butitisofsecondaryimportance.’ LifeatMI6’sheadquarterswasnomorefreefromhazardthaninthatofanyothercentralLondon office:onSunday,18June1944CecilandMenzieswereworkinginBroadwayBuildingwhenaV-1 flyingbombdescended,onewingtouchingQueenAnne’sMansionsnextdoorbeforetheprojectile slewedintotheGuardsChapelandexplodedduringaservice,killing120ofthecongregation.Cecil arguedthatawartime‘C’neededtobeamanof‘coolcourageandhighintegrity,seekingonlyhow besttoapplytheingenuityofothersinthecommoncause.Menzieswastherightmanintheright placeattherighttime.’Cecil’scaseforthedefencedeservesnotice.Ithasbeenasourceof exasperationtoBritishintelligenceofficerssince1945thattheirservice’sbest-knownchroniclersof itswartimeexperiencewereHughTrevor-Roper,GrahamGreeneandMalcolmMuggeridge,all notoriouslyerraticpersonalities.Ofthethree,onlyTrevor-Roperdistinguishedhimselfasan intelligenceofficer,andevenheseemedtorecogniseinhispost-warwritingthatblanderqualities thanhisownwereneededinthemanagersofasecretservice:‘Apparentlymiraculousachievements aretheresultsnotofmiraculousorganisations,butofefficientroutines.Theheadofanintelligence serviceisnotasuperspybutabureaucrat.’BillBentinckoftheJICwasoncecanvassedasacandidate tosupplantMenzies,buttherewasnoappetitetochangejockeysrelativelylateintherace,when Bletchley’sachievementwasbeingcelebratedthroughoutthecouncilsoftheAlliedwarlords. Inallthebelligerentcampstherewasfiercedebateaboutthemeritsofcentralisationversus dispersalofintelligenceeffort.Empire-buildingandrivalrybyBritain’sMI5,MI6andSOE, especially,causedduplicationandwastedresources.Butthisalsoenableddisparategroupsofmen andwomen,someofthehighestintellect,topursuetheirownideasandcourses,totheadvantageof theAlliedcause:athousandseedsweresown.Thoughmanyprovedsterile,someproducedwondrous blooms,theRadioSecurityServiceandRadioAnalysisBureaunotableamongthem.IfintelligencegatheringandsabotagehadbeencentralisedunderMI6’scontrol,theweaknessesofBroadwaywould merelyhavebecomemoredeeplyembedded.AndeventhenotoriousfeudsbetweenMI6andSOEdid lessinjurytotheAlliedwareffortthandidtheglacialrelationshipbetweentheUSArmyandUS Navy. ThemostplausibledefenceofBroadway’swartimerecordistoposethequestion:whichother nation’ssecretserviceperformedbetter?StewartMenzieswasalimitedman,butheshowedhimselfa stablerpersonalitythanDonovan,Canaris,Schellenberg,Fitin–hiscounterpartsintheotherwarring capitals.Onthedebitside,MI6creatednothingcomparablewithOSS’sResearch&Analysisdivision. Itneverforgedlinkswithanti-HitlerGermans,especiallyinthearmy,asdidtheRussiansandlatterly theAmericans.Buttherewasaconstrainthere:theprimeministerhadimposeddraconianrestrictions uponanycontactswithGermanywhichmightfeedStalin’smorbidfearsthattheWesternAllies wantedaseparatepeace.ItwasthisthatcausedtheForeignOfficerepeatedlytospurnapproaches fromanglophilemembersoftheGermanResistancesuchasHelmuthvonMoltkeandAdamvon Trott.Onlyontechnologicalissues,suchastheV-weaponsdiscussedbelow,canitbearguedthat well-placedhumintsourcesinGermanycouldhaveexercisedimportantinfluence.Ultraprovided suchpeerlessinsightsintotheenemy’scampthatitishardtoimaginewhatspiesmighthavedone better. 2 TH E J EW EL O F S O UR C ES ThetriumphoftheUSSignalsIntelligenceServiceinsecuringaccesstotheJapanesePurple diplomaticciphercontributedlittletowinningthewar,becauseitwasnotamilitarychannel,but notableamongitsachievementswasrecruitmentoftheJapaneseambassadorinBerlinasasource.It wasadrolleryofthetimethatthestrivingsandsacrificesofAlliedsecretagentssecurednohumintas interestingasthatunconsciouslycontributedbyBaronHiroshiŌshima.Hisdispatches,decryptedby ArlingtonHallandBletchleyPark,providedawindowontheNazihighcommand,andoccasionally onHitler ’sintentions.Ōshimawasnotacleverman–indeed,hismilitaryandpoliticaljudgement wasterrible.Untiltheendof1942heremainedanunswervingbelieverinHitler ’simpending triumph,andimpatientforJapantosharethespoils.From1939onwards,herepeatedlyurgedhis countrymen:‘Don’tmissthebus!’Hisshort,chunkyfigurewasoftenphotographedgazing admiringlyupattheFührer.In1942Göbbelswroteinhisdiary:‘Oshimareallyisoneofthemost effectivechampionsofAxispolicies.Amonumentoughtinduecoursetobeerectedinhishonour.’ Thissentimentwouldhavebeenechoed,fordifferentreasons,inWashingtonandLondon,because theNazileadershipconfidedmorefreelyintheJapaneseambassadorthaninanyotherforeigner,and theAlliesbecameprivytoeverythinghelearned.HesenttoTokyoseventy-fivedispatchesin1941,a hundredin1942,fourhundredin1943,sixhundredin1944andthreehundredinthelastmonthsof thewar,someofthemvoluminous,andallreadbytheAllieswithinaweekorsooftheir transmission. Ōshimawasbornin1886,sonofapoliticianwhoservedaswarministerintwo1916–18Tokyo cabinets.HeknewGermanyintimately,havingbeenfirstpostedthereasmilitaryattachéin1934,and becameapopularfigureontheBerlindiplomaticcircuit,amusic-loverandkeenparty-goerwho sometimesconsumedanentirebottleofkirschwithoutvisibleill-effects.In1938hewaselevatedto ambassadorandlieutenant-general.ThoughrecalledtoTokyointheautumnof1939,hewas reappointedinDecember1940,bywhichtimeWashingtonwasreadingPurple,andsoonprovidedthe Britishwiththemeanstodolikewise.Thereafteruntiltheendofthewarsome2,000ofŌshima’s dispatchesandmessagesweredecrypted,translatedandcirculatedtoRoosevelt,Marshall,Churchill andseniorintelligenceofficersonbothsidesoftheAtlantic.Ifhisassessmentsandpredictionswere oftenpoor,hisaccountsofconversationswithtopNazisappeartohavebeenaccurate,andhewasan intermediaryforimportantexchangesbetweenTokyoandBerlin. Forinstance,on10May1941foreignministerYōsukeMatsuokasentalettertotheambassadorfor onwardpassagetoRibbentrop,urgingrestraintintheGermangovernment’spublicremarksaboutthe UnitedStates:‘OurmutualloyaltymakesmedeeplyanxioustocausetheAmericanPresidentto reflectandcheckhisrecklessplans,and…Ihavebeenworkingnightanddaytothisend.By preventingthestagingofArmageddonandtheconsequentdownfallofmoderncivilization(ifanact ofmancanmakethatpossible)IshalltherebydischargemydualresponsibilitytoGodandman.’On 24MayŌshimareportedaconversationwithCiano,Mussolini’sforeignminister,inwhichthelatter said:‘DoyounotthinkthatoutbreakofwarbetweenGermanyandSovietUnionisvirtually inevitable?’ On4June1941ŌshimareportedtoTokyo,andthustoWashingtonandLondon,theviewsofHitler andRibbentropthat‘ineveryprobabilitywarwithRussiacannotbeavoided’.Afewdayslaterhe expressedtheviewthatGermanywouldsecurevictorytooquicklyfortheAmericansandBritishto beabletoofferStalinusefulhelp;itwasthedecryptofthisdispatchthatbelatedlyconvincedtheJoint IntelligenceCommitteeinLondonthatHitlerwasindeeddeterminedonwar.AttheendofJuly ŌshimatoldTokyoofhisconvictionthattheUSwouldsooncomeintothewar;theonlydoubtinhis mindwashowfartheAmericanswouldbeabletogivemeaningfulassistancetoBritain.Tokyo, however,toldhimnothingaboutitshardeningcommitmenttostrikingfirst.Throughout1941the AlliesremaineduncertainaboutJapaneseintentionstowardstheSovietUnion–aswasBerlin.The TokyogovernmentasserteditsintentiontojointheGermansinattackingtheRussians,butrefusedto specifyatimescale.Ōshimasenthomefullandfrequentdispatchesabouttheprogressof ‘Barbarossa’,whichreinforcedAmericanandBritishperceptionsthattheRussianswereontheropes. WhenŌshimareportedon25AugustthattheRedArmywasestimatedtohavesufferedbetweenfive andsixmillioncasualties–nogreatexaggeration–howcouldWesterngovernmentsfailtobe impressed?BylateNovember,however,Tokyowastellingthebaronthatitwouldwelcomeapeace dealbetweenHitlerandStalin. From1942onwardsŌshimareportedthesailingstoJapanofblockade-runningvessels,andlater submarines.ThecombinationofinterceptsfromhisBerlinembassyandKriegsmarinesignalssnared byBletchleyandOp-20-GenabledtheAlliestowreakhavocwithattemptsbytheJapanesetobreak theAlliedblockadeandcarryeithercommoditiestoEuropeortechnologicalprizeshomeward.Once surfaceblockade-runnershadbeendisposedof,andtheAxiswasreducedtounderwater communication,from1942onwardsfifty-sixload-carryingsubmarinesweredispatched,ofwhich twenty-nineweresunk,threeabandonedtheirmissionsandonewasinterned.Oftwenty-threewhich completedaone-waypassage,onlyfivesucceededinreturninghomeintact,survivorsofdevastation bysigint. Churchillwaspromptedtolaunchapre-emptiveBritishinvasionofFrenchMadagascarbya17 MarchdispatchfromtheambassadorassertingthatJapanwouldreceiveGermany’sfullsupportin attemptingtosecuretheislandforitself.On27JulyTokyotoldthebaronthatallhisurgingshadbeen invai