A TRAFFIC OF SPIES

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP88-01350R000200560002-1
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
December 19, 2016
Sequence Number: 
2
Case Number: 
Content Type: 
MAGAZINE (OPEN SOURCE)
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PDF icon CIA-RDP88-01350R000200560002-1.pdf120.84 KB
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Approved For Relea 2969p(1 Pa1 f88-0135 A trb i `c of c) pies SPY T (?A[:1?. 'By E. I-1. Cookridge. Hodder and Stoughton. 288 pages. #2.50. GtNLEN: SPY OF'li-12 C::N-rU21Y By E. H. Cook ridgo. Hodder and Stoughton. 424 pages. #3.75. The beauty of spies is in the eye of the beholder. Mine are fine, Until they get caught. Yours are black- guards ; or so, at least, governments and spy 'trial judges conventionally pretend. In the eyes of most of us spies are -remote outsiders, though worth a second glance should you ever surely recognise one.. And Mr Cook- ridge observes in the opening chapter of " Spy Trade " that it is not only the richly ornamental spy of-fiction who excites pleasurable curiosity. How it happens that many a " real life " spy has been able to turn profit- able publicist instead of having to languish in jail for as long as his captors had originally intended he should, is amply explained in " Spy Trade." The author discusses over a score of postwar cases of governments bartering captive foreign agents against their own incarcerated men. For in the end, it seems, no govern- ment is quite so beastly as to disown altogether a man who has supplied it with valuable intelligence,' however dis- reputable he may have been made to look subsequently. A delicate matter in?these exchanges is the comparative worth of the hostages. available. When equally big fish are' not at hand several small fry have the good luck to be thrown in to balance the scales. Mr Cookridge devotes seven of his 21 chapters to the intricate circumstances in which Moscow' exploited the windfall of Mr ..Gary Powers and, the U-2 shot clown over Siberia to effect the release in February, icf62, of Colonel Rudolf Ivanovich Abel, the highly competent. Soviet spy in the United States, who had been sent to prison for. 30 years. Among other comparable cases con- . sidered by the author are those of Messrs Greville Wynne and Gordon Lonsdale, the Krogers and Mr Gerald Brooke, and Mr Alfred Frenzel, (a 'rncaltiu-ie-minded Bundestag deputy who had sold defence secrets to the Warsaw Pact coiuntries) and the com- paratively insignificant west German archaeologist, Frat; Martina Kischke. The book is aptly illustrated with 40 photographs. Like the rest of us, spies are mostly weird birds, variously impelled by the exigencies not only of mating, feed- ing and drinking (preferably the hard stuff) but also by patriotism, religious or political belief, some personal grievance against society, or, above all, by the desire to be somebody different and. important. Even- the fabulously competent and studiedly aloof General Gehlen displays in his recently pub- lished autobiography an undignified itch to play to the gallery, not merely for the lolly. -that t knowled ,eable agent (literary) can rake from the international market but also for personal vindication in the face of latter-day disparagement. Mr Cookridge, perhaps in deference to his publishers, calls his other book Gehlen : Spy of the Century.". But in fact Reinhard Gehlen himself never crossed 'a frontier tp spy out' the nakedness, of the land' of military apparel. General Gelilen controlled a far-reaching network. of agents' and shrewdly fitted their bits and pieces of information into a'cohcrent picture. In Berlin, during 'the second world Nvur, he was the organiser and co-ordinator of intelligence or t e.' Wehrmacht on the eastern front. (It, was not his fault that 1-litler dis- regarded unpleasant news.) In.Bavaria, after the war; Gehlcn put: his exper- ience and knowledge at the disposal of. the west, first the, United States, and then the Federal German I.Repiublic. As head of the Federal Intelligence Service he tapped sources of invaluable information ? from the rival cast German Democratic Republic, especially in the days when it was expanding much of its " People's Police " into. a " People's Army " tutored by Soviet officers. In March, 1968, Gehlcn was the first to predict, on the strength of contacts in the Soviet Union, that Moscow would dis- place the Dubc.ek regirire in PraV-ue by force. Eventually he came in for heavy public ct'iticisrn for high-handed ways and undiscriminating choice of staff, including some former SS officers and such costly double agents as Heinz Felfe: It is in all a fascinating story and Mr Cookridgc tells it well. The text is adequately documented. But there are a. few mildly irritating mistakes. Herr Brandt, for-instance, spells ? his first name Willy not Willi. And there cannot have been a rendezvous at Milestone to-1 on the autobahn ; there are only kilometre posts. STATINTL Approved For Release 2006/Q6/19: CIA-R?P88-0135OR000200560002-1