Spy and Counterspy: Secret Agents and Double Agents from the Second World War to the Cold War

Spy and Counterspy: Secret Agents and Double Agents from the Second World War to the Cold War

by Ian Dear
Spy and Counterspy: Secret Agents and Double Agents from the Second World War to the Cold War

Spy and Counterspy: Secret Agents and Double Agents from the Second World War to the Cold War

by Ian Dear

eBook

$2.99 

Available on Compatible NOOK devices, the free NOOK App and in My Digital Library.
WANT A NOOK?  Explore Now

Related collections and offers

LEND ME® See Details

Overview

The shadowy world of supposedly legalized spying has an enduring fascination for us all. Spy and Counterspy reveals for the first time the web of spies that spanned the globe during and after the Second World War, working for organisations like MI5 & MI6, the CIA & OSS, Soviet Smersh & NKVD, Japanese Tokko and the German Gestapo. These men and women lived extraordinary lives, always on the edge of exposure and the risk of death. Many of them were so in love with the Great Game of espionage that they betrayed their countries and acted as double and sometimes even triple agents in a complex deception that threatened the very grasp of power in government. Their war in the shadows remained unrecognized until today.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780752479194
Publisher: The History Press
Publication date: 07/01/2013
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 256
Sales rank: 906,046
File size: 2 MB
Age Range: 12 Years

About the Author

IAN DEAR is an historian with an unusual background in covert warfare. He served in the Royal Marines beofre working in the film and book publishing industries. He became a full time writer in 1979 specializing in military and maritime history and has written a vast number of books on secret operations of the war, including Marines at War, Escape and Evasion and Sabotage and Subversion (both The History Press) and Ten Commando. He spent five years as general editor of The Oxford Companion to World War II and co-edited, with the late Peter Kemp, The Oxford Companion to Ships and the Sea.

Read an Excerpt

Spy and Counterspy

Secret Agents and Double Agents from the Second World War to the Cold War


By Ian Dear

The History Press

Copyright © 2013 Ian Dear
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-0-7524-7919-4



CHAPTER 1

Pit and Pan and the English Patient


In May 1942 German Military Intelligence (Abwehr) mounted SALAM, the codename for an operation to infiltrate two of its spies across the desert from Axis-held Libya into Egypt. Once this was accomplished, the spies were to implement operation CONDOR, which was to discover British plans to prevent German and Italian forces from capturing the Suez Canal, Britain's lifeline to its Far East Empire. They were also ordered to encourage an incipient Egyptian Army plot to revolt against the British.

Erwin Rommel, the charismatic German general commanding the Axis armies in Libya, already had an excellent, if unwitting, intelligence source in the American military attaché in Cairo, Colonel Fellers. The role of Fellers was to report to Washington on what the British were up to militarily and diplomatically. This he did meticulously, not knowing that the diplomatic cipher (the Black Code) he used to relay his reports was being read by the Italians who had acquired photographs of the code's enciphering tables from the US embassy in Rome.

This Black Code intelligence was invaluable to Rommel for two reasons: it was very detailed and it was extremely reliable, as it was hardly likely that the British would give false information to the United States, which was soon to become their ally. So pleased was Rommel with this intelligence that he called it die gute Quelle (the good source), and it was also known to the Germans as 'the little fellows' or 'the little fellers', a play on the US attaché's name. Nevertheless, it was decided that a back-up source was needed should the American one dry up (which it did at the end of June 1942).

Putting agents on the ground would also enable the Germans to encourage the anti-British faction in the Egyptian armed forces – it included two future Egyptian presidents, Gamal Abdel Nasser and Anwar el-Sadat – which was plotting to oust the British from Egypt. In this they faced a formidable task, for though the country had officially become an independent constitutional monarchy under the Anglo-Egyptian treaty of 1936, the treaty gave the British certain rights in wartime. These they invoked when hostilities began that made Egypt virtually an occupied – though still independent – country.

In February 1941 Rommel and the two divisions of the famous Deutsches Afrika Korps (DAK) were sent to boost the flagging Italian Army, whose efforts to conquer Egypt from their Libyan colony had proved fruitless. In what became known as the Western Desert Campaign, the two sides fought across the vast expanses of sand and scrub known as the Libyan Desert, though its eastern part was in Egypt. The size of the entire Indian sub-continent, it covers an area of over 1.5 million square miles (3.9 million square kilometres) and dwarfs any of the world's other deserts. Like a rutted cart track it has a series of parallel escarpments running east to west down its entire length, some of them as high as 1,000ft (305m). In places the wind, over millennia, has hollowed out the base of these ridges so that the underground water table is close enough to the surface to create oases. Before the advent of the motorcar and the aeroplane these oases were completely isolated, and the vast distances and the rugged terrain made exploration all but impossible. The only mode of travel was by camel. This has a maximum range of about 270 miles (430km) as it needs water after 15 days. So much of the desert remained unmapped, and early motorised explorers faced a formidable and dangerous task.

Because of the distances involved, explorers and armies alike were faced with the problem of supply, particularly fuel. The climate, too, made movement difficult as temperatures in the desert summer could reach 150°F (65°C) while at night they dropped to below freezing, and the winds could whip up fierce, blinding sandstorms at a moment's notice. It was an impossibly difficult climate to fight in where, above all, speed was of the essence. As Rommel commented, it was the one thing that mattered, and 'territory was less important than to keep moving until a tactically favourable position for battle was found, and then to fight'.

Though the British and those allied to them – principally de Gaulle's Free French forces and those from the British Commonwealth – were sometimes slow in responding to Rommel's rapier-like thrusts, they did possess a small, highly mobile, strike force that punched well above its weight. Called the Long Range Desert Group (LRDG), this was formed in June 1940 by a self-taught geographer, Captain Ralph Bagnold, a Cambridge University-educated regular officer in the Royal Engineers. Its main function was to gather intelligence by keeping a road watch behind Rommel's lines, but it also mounted lightning attacks on enemy fuel dumps, airfields and garrisons, and made a general nuisance of itself.

Between the wars Bagnold had been one of the pioneers of motorised desert exploration using stripped down Model A Fords. An ingenious, mechanically gifted man, he had perfected a method of preventing his car's radiator from boiling dry by using a rubber tube to connect the radiator overflow to a tank half full of water, which was fixed to the car's running board. The steam from the overflow would then condense into water before being sucked back into the radiator. He also learnt how to surmount the 300ft (91m) sand dunes by driving at them full tilt; how to avoid being bogged down in the soft sand by drastically reducing the pressures of his vehicles' tyres; and how, if he did get stuck, to free himself by using steel channels and rope ladders under the front wheels. To navigate across the desert day and night he taught himself to use a theodolite to measure the height of the stars and, knowing how a magnetic compass was affected by the steel in his vehicle, he perfected a sun compass with which to calculate his bearings.

Above all, Bagnold's desert experience taught him never to attempt to venture anywhere with only one vehicle, and if one did break down those in it should never attempt to leave it, however powerful the urge to do so. He later wrote:

An extraordinary powerful impulse urges one to move, anywhere, in any direction, rather than stay still and think it out. This psychological effect of the true desert has been the cause of nearly every desert disaster of recent years. Always the lost one leaves his broken-down aeroplane or car and begins an unreasoning trudge, somewhere – it does not matter where. The vehicle is found by planes or trackers, but the solitary, half-demented walker is too small to spot.


All this experience Bagnold had accumulated during expeditions with a few companions in the 1920s and 1930s in order to discover and map the most inaccessible parts of the desert. His feats included exploring a vast area of desert between Cairo and Ain Dalla, said to contain the mythical city of Zerzura; and making, in 1932, the first recorded east–west crossing of the Libyan Desert. He always asserted these epic journeys had been made for the fun of it, and there is no reason to disbelieve him, though some suspected him of doing it for military purposes. Certainly when the war came to North Africa he was able to put this knowledge to good effect by forming the LRDG, whose Chevrolet trucks and command cars were manned mainly by New Zealanders. According to Bagnold, they adapted to desert warfare like ducks to water.

* * *

Bagnold and his companions were not alone in their early enthusiasm for motorised desert travel. At the same time as they were making their first ventures into the Sahara, a certain putative Hungarian count, Laszlo Almasy, was mounting his own expeditions. The main character in Michael Ondaatje's novel The English Patient – later made into a highly successful film – was based on Almasy, who came from what has been described as a dysfunctional and disgruntled family, which lacked a noble title despite its ancient Hungarian lineage.

Almasy was born in 1895 at Castle Borostyanko in western Hungary – renamed Burg Bernstein when the region became part of eastern Austria after the First World War – which belonged to his grandfather, Eduard Almasy. Attached to this forbidding ancient fortress was a large and prestigious estate. Both had been bought by Eduard to increase the family's social standing and the possibility of being ennobled. Eduard had a son, Gyorgy, whose Italian-born wife produced two sons, Janos and Laszlo, and a daughter, Gyorgina. Gyorgy was an ethnographer and explorer, though he preferred to investigate the fleshpots of central Europe. This inevitably brought marital strife and discord and, perhaps, accounted for Almasy's inability in later life to establish long-term relationships. Not surprisingly, the marriage ended in divorce.

Though a gifted linguist – he spoke Hungarian, German, French, Italian, English, and later Arabic – Laszlo Almasy was not interested in academic subjects, at which he proved to be quite hopeless. Instead, from a young age, he became enthralled by two of the new mechanical wonders of the era: the aeroplane and the automobile; at just 14 he built himself a rudimentary glider. Then, in a final attempt to give him a proper education, Almasy's grandfather sent him to an educational establishment in Eastbourne on the English south coast. This also failed, but it did give the budding aviator a chance to join the local flying club, and after only a few hours of instruction Almasy, then aged 17, qualified for a pilot licence. At around this time he also learnt to drive, for his licence records that the following year he was fined for dangerous driving. However, before he could break his neck either on the road or in the air, the First World War broke out and Almasy hastened home to join the army. He then transferred to the recently formed Austro-Hungarian Air Force. In March 1918 he was shot down and wounded, and he spent the rest of the war as a flying instructor.

In 1919 the Austro-Hungarian Empire was broken up and the Hapsburg Emperor Karl IV took refuge in Switzerland. However, there were some, including Almasy, who wanted him back on the throne, even if it was only the Hungarian one, and in 1921 Almasy aided the emperor's two abortive attempts to regain it. As a reward for his support, Karl IV made Almasy a count before retreating to exile in Madeira where he died the following year. However, Almasy could not use the title in Hungary (though he did elsewhere) as it was never ratified by the Hungarian parliament.

In these early post-war years Almasy was employed as secretary and huntsman to a Hungarian bishop, and this brought him many new contacts amongst the rich and powerful, including Egyptian royalty and aristocracy who came to enjoy the hunting on offer. He also pursued his early enthusiasm for the motor car by taking a mechanics course and participating in motor rallies, driving for the Graz-based Steyr Automobile Works. He became something of a star on the rally circuit and this led Steyr to offer him a job in Cairo as their representative for the Middle East and Africa. In the winter of 1926 he began his new career by driving a Steyr touring car from Cairo to Aswan, a distance of some 600 miles (950km) beside the River Nile on what was no more than a desert track. From there he and his companion drove across the Nubian Desert to Khartoum, and then followed the Blue Nile and its tributary the Dinder before returning to Cairo.

This pioneering trek, and the tests Almasy subsequently carried out on other Steyr models, established his reputation as an intrepid motorised explorer. It honed his skills as a mechanic and taught him the techniques of driving in the desert. His method of negotiating a sand dune was a star turn for those he took on desert tours, and he would earn himself extra money by showing them how it was done. Like Bagnold, he drove at top speed up the gradually sloping windward side of the dune. Then, when he reached the top, he would turn sharply so that the car slid sideways down the dune's steep leeward side. So popular did this trick become that the practice was banned on safety grounds, though in fact it was not as dangerous as it sounded.

Taking the rich on desert tours and on hunting safaris soon became a way of life for Almasy, and supplemented his earnings from Steyr as well as giving its products good publicity. An early supporter of his desert forays was Prince Kemal el Din, a fabulously wealthy member of the Egyptian royal family. Kemal, a keen explorer himself, had, in 1926, mapped part of a rocky desert plateau known as Gilf Kebir (The Great Wall), before ill health had overcome him. He gave Almasy a three-year contract to finish the job and, hopefully, to discover the lost city of Zerzura, or the Oasis of the Small Birds as it was called.

Finding Zerzura quickly became an obsession with Almasy – as it had with Bagnold and other desert explorers – as did discovering another of the desert's most enduring legends: the remains of the army of Cambyses, the fifth-century BC Persian conqueror of Egypt, which had allegedly vanished in one of the desert's fearful sandstorms. Such romantic and whimsical destinations caught the fancy of those wealthy enough to indulge their fantasies, and Zerzura in particular became such a magnet to interwar explorers that they formed the 'Zerzura Club'. This had no premises and no rules, beyond the obligation to attend the annual dinner at the Café Royal in London's Regent Street. Both Bagnold and Almasy attended these functions, where Almasy would have met a number of Englishmen who were soon to become his enemies. Doubtless, they exchanged experiences and learnt about each other's desert techniques.

Desert exploration proved to be the ideal life for the young adventurous Hungarian aristocrat. Though he never had any money, he knew everyone and indulged in the good life in Cairo, a city that was more European than it is today. He enjoyed living dangerously and his adventures read like cuttings from Boy's Own Paper. However, all this threatened to come to an end when, in 1932, Kemal and another of Almasy's richest backers both died; and, because of the Great Depression, he lost his job with Steyr.

However, in 1933, while exploring part of the Gilf Kebir that Kemal had already mapped, Almasy found some Stone Age cave paintings. Others had come across similar paintings of animals that had inhabited the area before it had gradually turned to sand, but Almasy was the first to discover paintings of the men who must also have lived there, by the side of a long-vanished lake. Those eager to see them paid him well to take them to the caves, but Zerzura remained elusive, and he did not have any luck finding the remains of the vanished army of Cambyses either. Though he continued his desert travels whenever the opportunity arose, he now turned to his other love, flying. He helped found Egypt's Royal Aero Club, became a flight instructor at Cairo airport, and ran the agency for a Hungarian firm that designed and built gliders.

By now there was talk of another war. Not surprisingly, Almasy's desert adventures had attracted the attention of British intelligence in Cairo. One of its tasks was to monitor disputed desert areas, and it had become concerned by the Italian occupation of the larger Libyan oases close to the Egyptian border. Some suspected Almasy was working for the Italians; others thought that he might be in the pay of the Germans; while the Italians were pretty sure he was being funded by the English, as a report by the Italian minister in Cairo indicated. 'It can be taken for granted that he is an agent of the complex English political-military organization in Egypt,' the minister wrote when it became known Almasy had found a way through the Gilf Kebir, which he called the Aqaba Pass. 'This is not tourist information, but indication of military aims. It shows that the English want ... to go from Egypt into Italian territory with heavy convoys.

The British Foreign Office, which thought Almasy both eccentric and unpleasant, had its own suspicions about him; for though he had undertaken several desert explorations with Englishmen, it was aware that more recently his travelling companions had come from potentially hostile countries such as Italy, Hungary and Germany. The fact that his elder brother, Janos, now the owner of Burg Bernstein, had taken up with Unity Mitford, a devout admirer of Hitler, must also have caused some suspicions as to where the family's political sympathies lay.

However, the Englishmen who had explored with him found him pleasant enough. Bagnold described him as an amusing, likeable man, though a secretive loner who would vanish from Cairo and reappear months later without revealing where he had been. Mysterious, too, was his sex life. In Cairo he was known as something of a ladies' man in search of a rich wife, but there were also rumours of homosexual encounters with small boys in the backstreets of the Egyptian capital – rather the opposite of the heterosexual English Patient the film portrayed. One thing was for sure: some English women he met disliked him on sight; one even refused to shake his hand. What wasn't known at the time, and only came to light in 1995 when a bundle of letters was found at Burg Bernstein, was that from the late 1930s Almasy had been carrying on an intermittent love affair with a young German actor called Hans Entholt. So smitten was Almasy with this young man that he made sure he accompanied him on Operation SALAM.

With war now fast approaching Almasy returned to Hungary and in 1939 joined the Royal Hungarian Air Force as a reserve officer and became a flight instructor. The same year his book, The Unknown Sahara, which had been published in Hungary in 1934, came out in a German edition. This brought him to the attention of the Abwehr's North African desk, which was recruiting specialists to ferment risings against British rule in the Middle East. An Abwehr officer from the Balkan desk, Major Nikolaus Ritter, visited Almasy in Budapest and was suitably impressed. 'A tall, distinguished-looking man,' he reported back, 'with finely chiselled features ... a cavalier of the old school.'


(Continues...)

Excerpted from Spy and Counterspy by Ian Dear. Copyright © 2013 Ian Dear. Excerpted by permission of The History Press.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Table of Contents

Contents

Title Page,
Acknowledgements,
List of Abbreviations,
Introduction,
1. Pit and Pan and the English Patient,
2. Stalin's Master Spy,
3. The Cambridge Five and Their Soviet Handlers,
4. The Singing Valet,
5. The Spy who Made Porridge,
6. The Spies of the Double-Cross System,
7. Decoding America's Soviet Spy Rings,
Bibliography,
Plate Section,
Copyright,

From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews