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This eBook first published in Great Britain by William Collins in 2018
Copyright © 2018 Richard Davenport-Hines
Cover design by Kate Gaughran
Cover images © Tallandier/bridgemanimages.com; © Keystone/Getty Images; © Lytton Strachey/Frances Partridge/Getty Images; © Keystone/Getty Images (photographs); Shutterstock.com(background texture & flag)
Richard Davenport-Hines asserts the moral right to be identified as the author of this work
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
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Source ISBN: 9780007516674
Ebook Edition © January 2018 ISBN: 9780007516681
Version: 2019-01-07
With love for † Rory Benet Allan
With gratitude to the Warden and Fellows of All Souls
The lie is a European power.
FERDINAND LASSALLE
Great is the power of steady misrepresentation.
CHARLES DARWIN
No great spy has been a short-term man.
SIR JOHN MASTERMAN
Men are classed less by achievement than by failure to achieve the impossible.
SIR ROBERT VANSITTART
Men go in herds: but every woman counts.
BLANCHE WARRE-CORNISH
Contents
Cover
Title Page
Copyright
Dedication
Epigraph
Author’s Note
Glossary
Illustration Credits
Aims
PART ONE: Rules of the Game
Chapter 1: The Moscow Apparatus
Tsarist Russia
Leninist Russia
Stalinist Russia
The Great Illegals
Soviet espionage in foreign missions
The political culture of everlasting distrust
Chapter 2: The Intelligence Division
Pre-Victorian espionage
Victorian espionage
Edwardian espionage
Chapter 3: The Whitehall Frame of Mind
The age of intelligence
The Flapper Vote
Security Service staffing
Office cultures and manly trust
Chapter 4: The Vigilance Detectives
The uprising of the Metropolitan Police
Norman Ewer of the Daily Herald
George Slocombe in Paris
The Zinoviev letter and the ARCOS raid
MI5 investigates the Ewer–Hayes network
Chapter 5: The Cipher Spies
The Communications Department
Ernest Oldham
Hans Pieck and John King
Walter Krivitsky
Chapter 6: The Blueprint Spies
Industrial mobilization and espionage
Propaganda against armaments manufacturers
MI5 watch Wilfrid Vernon
MI5 watch Percy Glading
The trial of Glading
PART TWO: Asking for Trouble
Chapter 7: The Little Clans
School influences stronger than parental examples
Kim Philby at Westminster
Donald Maclean at Gresham’s
Guy Burgess at Eton and Dartmouth
Anthony Blunt at Marlborough
Chapter 8: The Cambridge Cell
Undergraduates in the 1920s
Marxist converts after the 1931 crisis
Oxford compared to Cambridge
Stamping out the bourgeoisie
Chapter 9: The Vienna Comrades
Red Vienna
Anti-fascist activism
Philby’s recruitment as an agent
Chapter 10: The Ring of Five
The induction of Philby, Maclean and Burgess
David Footman and Dick White
The recruitment of Blunt and Cairncross
Maclean in Paris
Philby in Spain: Burgess in Section D
Goronwy Rees at All Souls
Chapter 11: The People’s War
Emergency recruitment
The United States
Security Service vetting
Wartime London
‘Better Communism than Nazism’
‘Softening the oaken heart of England’
Chapter 12: The Desk Officers
Modrzhinskaya in Moscow
Philby at SIS
Maclean in London and Washington
Burgess desk-hopping
Blunt in MI5
Cairncross hooks BOSS
Chapter 13: The Atomic Spies
Alan Nunn May
Klaus Fuchs
Harwell and Semipalatinsk
Chapter 14: The Cold War
Dictaphones behind the wainscots?
Contending priorities for MI5
Anglo-American attitudes
A seizure in Istanbul
Chapter 15: The Alcoholic Panic
Philby’s dry martinis
Burgess’s dégringolade
Maclean’s breakdowns
The VENONA crisis
PART THREE: Settling the Score
Chapter 16: The Missing Diplomats
‘All agog about the two Missing Diplomats’
‘As if evidence was the test of truth!’
States of denial
Chapter 17: The Establishment
Subversive rumours
William Marshall
‘The Third Man’
George Blake
Class McCarthyism
Chapter 18: The Brotherhood of Perverted Men
The Cadogan committee
‘Friends in high places’
John Vassall
Charles Fletcher-Cooke
Chapter 19: The Exiles
Burgess and Maclean in Moscow
Philby in Beirut
Bestsellers
Oleg Lyalin in London
Chapter 20: The Mole Hunts
Colonel Grace-Groundling-Marchpole
Robin Zaehner and Stuart Hampshire
Anthony Blunt and Andrew Boyle
‘Only out for the money’
Maurice Oldfield and Chapman Pincher
Envoi
Picture Section
Notes
Index
Acknowledgements
About the Author
Also by Richard Davenport-Hines
About the Publisher
In MI5 files the symbol @ is used to indicate an alias, and repetitions of @ indicate a variety of aliases or codenames. I have followed this practice in the text.
– Sir Robert Vansittart, head of the Foreign Office. (Popperfoto/Getty Images)
– Cecil L’Estrange Malone, Leninist MP for Leyton East. (Associated Newspapers/REX/Shutterstock)
– Jack Hayes, the MP whose detective agency manned by aggrieved ex-policemen spied for Moscow. (© National Portrait Gallery, London)
– MI5’s agent M/1, Graham Pollard. (Esther Potter)
– MI5’s agent M/12, Olga Gray. (Valerie Lippay)
– Percy Glading, leader of the Woolwich Arsenal and Holland Road spy ring. (Keystone Pictures USA/Alamy Stock Photo)
– Wilfrid Vernon, the MP who filched aviation secrets for Stalinist Russia and spoke up for Maoist China. (Daily Mail/REX/Shutterstock)
– Maurice Dobb, Cambridge economist. (Peter Lofts)
– Anthony Blunt boating party on the River Ouse in 1930. (Lytton Strachey/Frances Partridge/Getty Images)
– Moscow’s talent scout Edith Tudor-Hart. (Attributed to Edith Tudor-Hart; print by Joanna Kane. Edith Tudor-Hart. National Galleries of Scotland / Archive presented by Wolfgang Suschitzky 2004. © Copyright held jointly by Peter Suschitzky, Julie Donat and Misha Donat)
– Pall Mall during the Blitz. (Central Press/Getty Images)
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