The Secret Agent's Bedside Reader: A Compendium of Spy Writing

The Secret Agent's Bedside Reader: A Compendium of Spy Writing

The Secret Agent's Bedside Reader: A Compendium of Spy Writing

The Secret Agent's Bedside Reader: A Compendium of Spy Writing

Paperback(Reprint)

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Overview

Espionage fact and fiction collide in this thrilling anthology, where you’ll find some of the greatest spy stories ever written alongside genuine agent reports and instructions that changed the course of history.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781785904813
Publisher: Biteback Publishing, Ltd.
Publication date: 10/01/2019
Edition description: Reprint
Pages: 384
Product dimensions: 7.60(w) x 5.00(h) x 1.20(d)
Age Range: 16 Years

About the Author

Michael Smith is a bestselling author and award-winning journalist who has worked for the BBC, Daily Telegraph and Sunday Times. He lives in Henley, Oxfordshire.

Table of Contents

Introduction by Michael Smith
Joseph Conrad, The Secret Agent [Extract]
Erskine Childers, Riddle of the Sands [Extract]
William Le Queux, Spies of the Kaiser [Extract]
Basil Thomson, Queer People [Extract – On Spy Scares]
William Melville, Memoirs of life with early 20th century British Intelligence and then MI5 [National Archives]
John Buchan, Greenmantle [Extract]
HC Bywater and HC Ferraby, Strange Intelligence [Extract]
Basil Thomson, Queer People 2 [Extract on Mata Hari]
Captain Henry Landau, All’s Fair [Extract on the British agent inside Great Germany, Karl Krüger]
Karl Krüger, Report on Aftermath of Jutland [National Archives]
Somerset Maugham, Ashenden [Extract]
Redmond Cafferata, Instructions to Agents going into Germany [Extract from SIX]
Pierre-Marie Cavrois O'Caffrey, Intelligence report on potential bombing target in Belgium [National Archives]
Compton Mackenzie, Greek Memories [Extract]
JC Lawson, Tales of Aegean Intrigue [Extract]
Norman Dewhurst, Norman Dewhurst MC [Extract]
George Hill, Go Spy the Land [Extract]
John Dymoke Scale, Personal Memoir of Secret Service operations in Romania [Family Papers]
John Merrett and Sir Paul Dukes, Documents describing Merrett’s role in post-Revolution Petrograd [National Archives]
Sir Paul Dukes, Red Morrow [Extract]
Sidney Reilly, Ace of Spies [Extract]
Hubert Pollack, Memoir of Frank Foley’s role in saving Jews in Germany [Yad Vashem document]
Ian Fleming, On his own role as Personal Assistant to the Director of Naval Intelligence and on saving MI6 for Bond. [National Archives]
John Godfrey on Sidney Cotton [National Archives]
Airey Neave, Little Cyclone [Extract]
Mieczyslaw Zygfryd Slowikowski, Codename Rygor [Extract]
Richard Heslop, Xavier [Extract]
Maurice Buckmaster, They Fought Alone [Extract]
Michael Smith, The Bletchley Park Codebreakers [Extract on Double Cross Operation]
Juan Pujol Garcia, Operation Garbo [Extract]
Kenneth Benton, Recruitment of Double Agent Treasure [National Archives]
F.F.E. Yeo-Thomas on his arrest by the Gestapo and incarceration in Buchenwald [National Archives]
Bob Steers, Account of his MI6 operations in immediate post-war Berlin [Personal archives]
John le Carre, Call For The Dead [Permission being sought]
Ian Milne, Kim Philby [Extract]
Kim Philby, How I was recruited to work for Moscow [KGB Archives]
Graham Greene, The Human Factor [Extract] [Permission being sought]
Guy Burgess, Report to Moscow [KGB Archives]
Matthew Dunn, To select extract from one of his books [Permission Granted]
Alan Judd, Uncommon Enemy [Extract] [Permission being sought]
Anthony Blunt, Series of MI5 Cartoons Showing How to Tail a Spy, which Blunt passed to the KGB [KGB Archives] [You may remember they were in The Spying Game, the rights for which I have removed from Tummons’s clutches!]

Preface

Introduction


Few British government institutions can have employed as many successful writers as the Secret Intelligence Service, the organisation now commonly known as MI6. The links between Britain’s spies and the writing profession go back to the sixteenth century when the playwright Christopher Marlowe spied in France and the Netherlands on behalf of the government of Queen Elizabeth I, and was almost certainly murdered on behalf of his former employers. Marlowe reflected his experiences of the intelligence world in his play The Massacre in Paris, where the ‘English Agent’ is called to the deathbed of King Henry III of France, who has just been stabbed by a Catholic friar. Henry tells the English Agent to send word to his mistress the Queen of England ‘whom God has blessed for hating papistry’ to let her know of the Catholic assassination attempt. Some have interpreted the English Agent as being Marlowe, although Sir Francis Walsingham, the head of Elizabeth’s secret service, who was in Paris at the time, is a more likely candidate.


Walter Christmas, one of the first agents of the Secret Service Bureau, set up ahead of the First World War, was probably the first member of the modern intelligence services to write an espionage novel, in 1911, when he was still a very active agent of the British Secret Service. The enemy agents in Sven Spies were Germans, as they were for Christmas in real life. Many members of MI6 followed suit, with Somerset Maugham, Compton Mackenzie, Grahame Greene and John le Carré only the most famous in literary terms.


Christmas’s own life was the stuff of fiction. He was a Danish naval officer who travelled frequently into Germany to collect intelligence, and also provided Mansfield Cumming, the first ‘Chief’ of the Secret Intelligence Service, with reports on German shipping movements from the Danish Navy’s coast-watching service. The 48-year-old Christmas insisted that the courier who collected his intelligence should always be a pretty, young woman who was to meet him in a hotel in Skagen in northern Denmark. A succession of prostitutes were procured to collect his reports and deliver not just his pay but an additional, more traditional exchange between the world’s two oldest professions. When the Germans became suspicious of Christmas and he had to be exfiltrated to London, he was lodged in the notorious Shepherd Market area of Mayfair, where there were plenty of pretty young women, all pursuing the same business as the go-betweens who had collected his intelligence from the Skagen hotel.


When it came to their experiences in the British Secret Service, Maugham, Greene and le Carré stuck to fiction, although Maugham’s Ashenden short stories, published in 1928, sailed very close to the wind, barely disguising accounts of his genuine exploits in Switzerland and Russia during the First World War. Compton Mackenzie did something similar in Extremes Meet, basing the activities of Roger Waterlow, Chief of British Intelligence in a small Balkan country during the First World War, on his own time in First World War Greece, but he followed it up with a series of memoirs which culminated in one that went too far for his former employers. The original version of Greek Memories was banned, and remains banned, although it appears here in its original form.


It wasn’t just MI6. The other branches of British intelligence produced more than their own share of successful authors. William Le Queux, whose ‘invasion novels’ provoked the spy scares of the early 1900s, did so with the assistance of War Office intelligence, in a classic ‘agent of influence’ role. Ian Fleming, Charles Morgan and Angus Wilson all worked for naval Intelligence during the Second World War. Denis Wheatley was an RAF Wing-Commander working on deception operations in association with MI5. John Bingham, apparently le Carré’s inspiration for Smiley, was actually in MI5, as was his daughter Charlotte. Evelyn Waugh and Peter Kemp worked with the Special Operations Executive in the Balkans during the Second World War.


It is scarcely surprising that people accustomed to writing intelligence reports should be good story-tellers. As a relatively minor cog in the army’s Cold War intelligence machine, I still remember the pride I felt at my own elevation to what seemed at the time to be a small elite of intelligence reporters. The civilian Intelligence Officer who kept our military prejudices in check told me at the outset that a good intelligence report should be constructed in much the same way as you would tell a joke. It seemed so at odds with the importance of our work that I inevitably questioned it, but he said it was simple. We were writing reports for people very few of whom would have the same degree of knowledge of the subject area as us. It was important that we made sure that everything was in the right place and as straightforward as possible to understand, just as you would when telling a joke. Only then would our reports have the impact they needed to make. It is probably no coincidence that on my first shift on the Sunday Times foreign desk, one of the newspaper’s senior editors told me exactly the same thing about writing a news story.


Intelligence Officers have to be able to tell a very good story, whether it is in an intelligence report or in the ‘legend’ they adopt for an undercover operation. It is not for nothing that this is known as the cover story and the measure of how good it has to be is that for the author it may well mean the difference between life and death. So it is hardly surprising that, over the years, authors and journalists have made good Intelligence Officers, and a relatively large number of Intelligence Officers have gone on to become successful writers.


This is a selection of some of their very best work, a mixture of extracts from great espionage novels, of factual accounts by former Intelligence Officers of real life operations, and a number of actual intelligence reports or instructions and memos on intelligence issues. Apart from Joseph Conrad – whose brilliant The Secret Agent inspires the title of this book – all of the writers featuring here served in some role in British intelligence, from Le Queux’s dubious claims about German spies rampaging across Britain to John le Carré (who worked for both MI5 and MI6) introducing us to George Smiley, the man widely seen as the ideal spy. Put simply, these are intelligence professionals writing about the world of espionage. Ian Fleming is represented not by a passage from a James Bond novel but by his defence of MI6 from his boss, the Director of Naval Intelligence, Admiral John Godfrey, who wanted to replace it with his own naval secret service. Fleming saved MI6 from that fate, ensuring a home for the world’s most famous spy, the fictional hero with the licence to kill who did more for the Service’s reputation than even the very best of its real officers and agents.


Fleming is often dismissed as someone who never served in MI6 and therefore knew nothing about it. In fact, he was the chief liaison officer between MI6 and naval Intelligence. His books are littered with elements of authentic detail garnered during his service in the Second World War, when guns actually were widely used by MI6 and ‘liquidating’ people was a real option. M’s memos to Bond are written in the same green ink on the same blue paper as those sent out by C, and even on occasion typed on a typewriter with an unusually large type which the real wartime equivalent of Miss Moneypenny did sometimes use. Indeed so realistic were the Bond books deemed to be by some at the time they were published, that the Egyptian Secret Service ordered its London representative to buy a complete set for use by its training organisation.


There are plenty of other spies who have written about the world of espionage, either as fiction or in memoirs, and so could have appeared on these pages, A E W Mason, Anthony Cavendish, Monty Woodhouse and Malcolm Muggeridge to name just a few, but those included here are among the very best and the story is brought right up to date with two very recent novels covering contemporary themes, Slingshot by Matthew Dunn, ‘a former deep-cover officer’ in MI6, and Uncommon Enemy by Alan Judd, who is described coyly in the author biography which appears in his books as a ‘former soldier and diplomat’.


Michael Smith

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