PHILBY AND MACLEAN: THE YEARS OF DAMAGE

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CIA-RDP75-00149R000600330048-1
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RIPPUB
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K
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5
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December 9, 2016
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August 21, 2000
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48
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October 15, 1967
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NSPR
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CPYRGHT 13 th?TtiltEl1 19(17 The new perfume by M OLYNEUX Approved For Release 2001/07/27 : CIA-RDP75-00149R000600330048-1 CPYRGHT Wenekly review ?1714,1Lele b?k CI Flo 21 The world's most expensive twist suit'ng cloths 9101,SCOTLA(ND ,441, 4 f4f1a- R,????oR ACLEAN: HE YEARS ? OF DAMAGE ff. .f. if*4- 1 ':fleffof."` o?Rfft,' of;-?oox Kim Philby, recruited into Soviet intelligence in 1933, was ready by 1944 to exploit his 11 years of deception. The West was about to enter the crucial years of the cold war ? and Philby the Soviet spy was the head of the Soviet section of the British Secret Intelli- gence Service. And Donald Maclean, three years after Philby's breakthrough, had penetrated to the heart of " America's, secret atomic pro- gramm. . ,lott*foR ? ?,` , 1,4311.!,,,01 4, j ? '4: Ir; 71';; ? HP,41.0,' 4 _ 0 0Dl ace Or hi 'dr Pet- 146 f of if o. a fill:14 0L..to !in' Yr' " rot? ? .kx ? 1 ? VII ome men in es ed lip 1pg across the Iron Curtai Irmo Greeeelhaq Alban 111 WI! a' tichemel deigned ---test the feasibility] of breg ommunist control of Ortipe' by n: the st its in' a # a that I- Was available to him. Thi ould explain the fact?confirm to us independently by ex-C I an Robert Amory and ve a State Department offici at 14956 the CIA and SI ere k on plans to snatch achaileahli r, befroz. itteosleow. As 441 the We* even even s eh q ions tenticin of Brftaiora other main et department M I 5, it was ken as virtually Concludiv idence that /Inlay was working r the lbissisrlg. August 14 an iinex- ed visitor with a heavy Rus- ac nt,calleditoe the kntish lis speaking to, and not typed ere was a Russian agen ting in the British Turkey, he said, so he coul not risk anyone typing copies of his material. Secondly, there rnust be a decision within twenty ?ane days. If he had not heard byi the e ening of the twenty-firs watild, asasute 111 damaging. Mays' hninediate as from Landon * isa nn"blatiun.:SoPCIvItt?iIiertaillt position,4 111 s, 'is,t sea Approved For Release 2001/07/27 : CIA-RDP75-00149R000600330048-1 " ,? 1 R .4114 air, ?_ tr4a 1,1.4,1'41 4, I. 411$16r tal ' It' ? 4.- Ilit1.11:. 1 CPYRGHT Approved For Release 2001/07/27 : CIA-RDP75-00149R000600330048-1 Intel t.V1,1' SU :'JI pre- serve a degree of all e.cte, n, and runissils upon the moplaced idealist.! whit h led him to work Br 'di, his arc, Sq-gely s ?asho (a. :He sk as an agent wh realiy -lived hi.. coerS they say I re tuipas- 4110ned .4, lEkt the man who said to Pholy htittomed bastard, and he k,h led a lot of peos;o - Esplonaka, ,p101-1- cW! seem so mu as. She lised office-garnes t I sit the can get forgotten. But in ?Ails account of (?meer _Item 1945 to 1951 thei'c are two dal episodes 1k hi, h luridly mate the realities of the e, ? The first case is a mar. alone: a 'et intelligence officer caught the act of trying to defect to West That story ends with ndaged figure being hustled rd a Russian plane in nbul the second case, there are CPYRGHT as Vlallaily CIJIWILISIVU? -Opf rating Ill -Toe Erin s n Embassy- rise from London directorship 'of This was a scheme designed to man Rcbert Amory and verified, evidence that Philby was working in Turkey. he said, so he could anti-Soviet operations, through test Inn feasibility of breaking by a State Department official- for the Russians not risk anyone typing copies of an important field command to Communist control of Eastern that in 1956 the C I A and SI S Early in August 1945 an unex. his material, Secondly, there the position of C IA liaison in Europe by subversion the storylts were working on plans to snatch-,s, pected visitor with a heavy Rus- must be a decision within twenty- Washington. ends , , .1 crackle of small-arms Masks], back from Moscow. AS, sian accent called at the British ane days. If he had not heard by fire on bleak hillsides, and the he has never been interrogated Consulate in the Beyoglu district the evening of the twenty-first total discrediting of a policy in the West, evert such questions of Istanbul in Turkey The man, day, he would assume the deal which might have caused thea- as the nature tti his contacts must.- obviously very nervous, demanded was - off. He departed after Soviet Go? ernment a lot of _ still be mysterious. - an interview with a certain high- making complex arrangements trouble What can be closely mapped. ranking British diplomat. He for getting in touch. paieed east, sass, ie she shadow in this article is the ...cope If his wanted no one else present but The British diplomat spent a of Kan Philby-the Smaet pene. information-most vividly illuss himself and this diplomat-not long night preparing a hand- ? tration-agent at the heart of the trated by the amazing " non- `.even an interpreter. Philby survives an Secret-Intelligence Service, the escort " pass which allowed him The officer was found and the S S in London, and it went away m_sslnspec on an wose loyalty went un free access to the greatest store- " man was ushered into a quiets., :wih t the courier next cla. After,? written brief addressed to the tioned for so long. Indeed, it'S''. house of American weapons room. There, he spelt out the -s a week, there had een no might never have been ques- _ . secrets, the Atomic Energy Com- reason for his visit. He gave his response, and a cable was sent tioned, but for the fact that Philby, mission H Q in Washington. (That , name as Volkov. Ostensibly, he, from the Embassy in Turkey ask- '.'.as caught up in the complex, pass was used often, and late at was a newly-appointed Russian, ing for a reply. After another aftermath of Donald Maclean's. night.) Philby, of cousse, knew consul in Istanbul. Actually, hes week, there was still no reply; espionage for the Russians. . L. that it was worth some risk to get !. said. he had been appointed: and on the twentieth day the Maclean's own espionage w - Maclean away before he could be s head of Soviet Intelligence for that the accident of Burgess's Turkey.He had arrived only two,,.. flight with Maclean in 195r-- months earlier from the Moscow was essentially different i character and its precise effect can only be presumed. Th< Western intelligence community_ - would begin the destruction probably still does not rot. Philby's own unique position, . eir exactly how much inform tip Maclean actually got throu, ? 4 t ' ? ? the Russians out of the material - Volkov ;tioned, H COSTS BY Rentokil's can save you up to 20% of your fuel costs. Combined with Rentokil high quality double' glazing, and Hermeseal draughtproofing an roof insulation, over 40% of heating costs cant,? be saved. unique cavity filling service* aloneirg agents for' sale diplomat who had interviewed . Volkov had still heard nothing, and was almost frantic Then, at last, on the morning . of the twenty-first day, an agent headquarters of the NK V Elk, arrived from L on do n and,- .? (then initials of the Russians.. 'announced he had come to take, secret service), and he had ass- peno.na c '.,-... 1 charge h of the Volkorm- -- ' proposition to make. In return .: affair. He was a calm, unhurriect- " " ' for ?27,500 (an odd amount, but figure wearing a cutaway collar probably converted from a round ,_ with a flowing Byronesque cravat. sum in roubles), plus a laissez- It was Kim Philby. , passer to Cyprus, Volkov was pre- The diplomat who had inter- es- pared to offer certain valuable viewed Volkov, with nerves, las counter - espionage information, understandably taut, pointed out, ' Were the British interested? ' that the delay had probably' _?,,, ? The British diplomat was notr. ruined the whole deal--anil THE LAST days of the ,seconir'''' one of the resident S IS men_ asked why the hell couldn't some- 7 world war, and the first days on' operating under diplomatic cover one have come out sooner. Philby a the peace, were marked by urgent "--1-although the Russian, it seeffis, produced, casually, an almost discussions among young English-- assumed that he was. Neverthe- ' men who had been caught up in less, the diplomat expressed incredible excuse. "Sorry, old , man," he said. -' It would have the military machine on how to cautious interest. What was the interfered with leave arrange- re-assemble their broken careers.. information for sale? Naturally; meets:, . Most had one urgent impulse: to said Volkov, he was not prepared _ They tried to contact Volkov, .,do something which had h ad nothing - , to give details until there was ass . and waited for word to come. to do with their war work. It was 'deal. But-and here he handed's back. Nothing happened. In the, - Act now on this generous offer - a three book set, regularly priced at 57t-, for an impulse from which Kinn- - over a batch of handwritten notes-. s.? Philby seemed to be immune. end they sent men out to only le', 'Blueprint for Executives ss He showed no desire to revive - of what he had to sell. ,..and sketches-this was an outline . look for "Consul Volkov "-- ...`,,,. i .- success' i hfting thousands of - . but he could not be found.: - '-' 'nen to tnagigagaglang business gligigger/ . an age whcnothers are still struillling in -..si his excellent Pre-war PrnaPerta in ..: The British official read rapidly, -7 'Throughout the afternoon, the _ -.Z.__ low-paid obscurity. These three remark- ,- 1..1! jOUTIThliSM. To friends who did...se and with mounting excitement,- interviewing officer could get no - able volumes are indispensable to the! - not know what his wartime "civil; - ? -_ ' service " job had been, he said:- and descriptions of N K V la from Philby "I finally made up ttirisee ghti master the. sunge techniques .61.041..ra inr. enclosure teat nun :'hilby became a Soviet penetra- tion agent - in 1933, several -ttempts have been made to pre- tend that Philby was some kind of wartime undesirable, who was ccifientally left behind In the -0eaeetime SI S. This argument s badly weakened by the fact that here was a vigorous shakeout of he SIS in 1946, which was ntended precisely to remove any =liftable people who had slipped sit diming the confused days of the war. CPYRGHT is a result of this. It is nqf tune clear whether the operation was a part of the general inspee? ion of the Foreign Office carried iut that year under the preselt sord Caccia-that inspection did ouch on SIS and M I 5.-ogs whether It was really a separate tfair. What is quite cleans that' Thilby survived it. ? The year 1945 began on a good Kite for him, because lie received in 0 BE in the New Year's ionours (the list gave no specific vason for the award and merely. ant he was employed "in, a department of the Famish )ffic.e "). Philby's colleagues and ubordinates thought it was Well leserved: he was an immensely 'Iard-working officer-more ? ten han not the last man in the it night, and the one who in the chore of locking-up. . The only thing which seemed ven slightly likely to impede its rise to the top of the Service was a slight neglect of the sectid . ibligations of' departmental life. 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To war-weary colleagues,- "impressions and guard schedules: incompetent, or he was a Soviet lti'm . in the Secret Intelligence Service,..- numbers of all NKVD cars; a 'agent himself." _ wi can you retognition tor promotion, ".7twin th your earmarkassociatcs, like Malcolm Muggeridge, he--- list of Soviet agents in Turkeystre perespectsrsanon,cehiwrialolistatuspins inn 1n it was clear that Vollsow -litalssotape tin this new precasts the wall cavity is filled with Rockwool- a completely water repellent insulation material put in under pressure by a special machine. It makes no mess, causes no upheaval, is completed in a day or so. Rentokil offers the only comprehensive insu-'1,,, lation service. See' how much you can save. ,tRentokil expert will come by appointment an survey your property free of charge. ENTO I LABORATORIES LTD 1 '0.3.7.::.,.... Also dats,ry d sot Woeilman. Dry PM sad Dose ruches noires rap be ph Irani hoe an local 16 Dover St., t.OndOn, WI. Tel: 499 4324 Please arrange for Fre* Survey of the undermentioned property _ OR please send me free technical leaflet on: Cavity Filling 2, Roof Insulation .11 Double Glazing i] Draughtproofing , !lc* MINN* applip01.1 NAME ADDRESS evinced a willingeess to work onsletytogether with their means ornwas not coming, Philby returned! against Russian instead of German, ',..iseommunication; and Mially-t.;:to London. And then a few days antagonists antagonists which - they founcylahnost as a throwaway-" names%k-Dater, something occurred which simply baffling. .. 4..icif Russian agents operating in irevived the whole unhappy affair Muggeridge recalls a arunkerr "Government departments int am n the mind of the interviewing evening in Paris in 1945, when at s London." It all looked as though- officer. A Russian military air- ??? Philby's insistence, the two of ',.Comrade Volkov, before taking ' 'craft made an unscheduled, and -'10 them lurched round to take ak*..-up his post in Istanbul, had. quite irregular 1 a n d in g ari, ' look at the Russian Embassy. .'.spent some time in Moscow ' Istanbul airport. Philby marched up and downs: ,acquiring material which could /e, While the control tower wag , shaking his fist at the silent build- -take him into the Western world* still trying to think of something Mg. and demanding: "How are with a golden one-way ticket. . 'to do. a car raced out across the we going to penetrate them? "? The British official went straight- tarmac to the aircraft. A heavily.. Philby's zeal, of course, igpulsto his Ambassador, Sir Maurices7 bandaged figure on a stretche ighly explicable in retrospect: atiMPeterson. But the reaction from, was lifted from the car and put"' long-term Soviet agent who had- 'the Ambassador was one of, into the aircraft-which immedi- succeeded in early 1944 in becom- straight horror: he had for some ately took off. ing head of the British counter- time been trying to prevent what It seemed to be an urgent' Soviet espionage operation would he regarded as an "invasion " of Russian removal in the bravura hardly be ready to get out of the ? the Embassy by S I S men under style which was more common business. His war was just begin-- 'cover, and he saw the Volkov then, although still to be seen on -)iing, and the cavorting outside _ ;business as a step in the same- occasion. And it seemed a fair the Russian Emtiassy was no more direction. "No one. is going tol assumption that the man being 1: f an indiscretion than the action- -. turn my Embassy into a nest of?." removed was the unfortunate of a reeing-driver who cuts one,'-spies," he said. l'' If you must go.. 'Volkov: on which the interviewing" ' orner extra-close to revel in his - ahead laith this, business, do its officer decided to pass on his .ontrol. 1 through London." i doubts about Kim Philby to some- Around this time, however, The official returned to the one else. -Philby was involved in a serious waiting Bussian. London would He contacted a British S IS and peculiar incident. The way have ,fo,''have time to janake a officer, and reported his version" it was, handled raises strange Aeciskin,,h11 the propositlo#, he of the Volkov incident. But questions about the i philos ,said.nothing seems to have happened. , on which the. .Secret! Weil ' Voikoirlagreed to wai 6 - "If there was an inquiry, it was ' Se ie as , working - in t Made ? V loons. ,kept stri ,!inshie die 'S I S _ da ,y bet'ause lablett ' h -docuilla ' And clearly the'. 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Aileen, Philby's second wife TOM At that time, the S IS was devoted enough to the idea of togetherness to maintain a country house, with swim- ming pool, for the week-end' entertainment of the gaff. (The philosophy, perhaps _more typical of the CIA -.these days, was to keep the secret world as self- esufildent as possible, even at the risk of inbreeding.) Philby, though, did not spend Much time with his colleagues after hours: seemingly, he preferred to spend the time with his second wife Aileen and his growing family. A good reason for Philby to MOM the thne spent with his would have been - the feet that it would lessen drib of priwtually dis- lbg his political feelings. od of t.M people in the SIS at this time seem to have held Bight-wing views, sometimes extremely pronounced. One woman who worked in Philby's department recalls an Mmudon when she was the fortheentlite ,..;41.1:45cVeral Mediae with ??timotber woman colleague. "1 Jwas just saying: 'Wouldn't- It be awful if the dreadful Socialists got in,' when I got 'that feeling one does at there was someone standing - behind me. I looked round? and there was Mr Philby -101 _deg me a look 01 each idroleisce." But no harsh words accom- this baleful look. And fact Min seems to have get through his career as an SIS executive with scarcely a harsh word to anyone, whethee about politics or simple office imfficiency. It was one of the major reasons, naturally, for his success: he was noted for he heavy gaminer and his even, con- trolled temperament Malcolm Meaeridge, how- ever, claims to have detected in Pleilby at thiathne It quality " suppressed violence "? Ifor the Soviet authorities 'before 1946" (our emphasis). But when Philby arrived, lwith a eVe and four child- ' he lacked exactly like a ordinary diplomat. 1r Michael Cressweri, a pre- war acquaintance of Philby's (recently Ambassador in Argentina) called in on hilby and found it hard to lime he was in intelligence work. "It didn't seem like his line." Istanbul had been an im- portant neutral centre in the war East-West Germany. Now, ,gavethe it even greater Import- cc. It was at the centre a cold war which seemed ely to go hot at the drop ? an ultimatum. Turkey has ? long border with the Soviet -"Union, and another border with Communist Bulgaria.- In ?Jhe 'forties, Stalin was loudly Vt41 a big slice of t to PlizilkeluenWi bases , plus the on the Bosphorus and the Dardanelles. The Turks, in - seply, ware clamouring for *stern military aid. A civil war was raging in nearby w-Oreece, which looked as though it could easily go ist also? ? The city of Istanbul has dipterous advantages for espionage. Much Communist shipping passes through the rtsphorus. The city hat " **wishing communities of Armenians, Georgians, Bul- garians and Albanians with direct links to their home- communities behind the Cur- tain. And in the dark, wind- ing alleys of old Stamboul, there are innumerable bars and coffee-houses where clandestine meetings are easy. Philby worked from the British Consulate-General, a vast barracks-iike building standing in; a. waited cony in Be the 'flew" hart of the . He esta- Washington Embassy: detail from the stair group picture, October,' 1945. First Secretary, Donald Maclean, 6 foot 4 lathes tall, towers in the back row Melinda Madden and mu role ave hm t e fie d job, even in such at he was a British agent icture of the rising young tang* the Russians would at ackan "was a freq o ave severe 'crucial area as Turkey? ling to work for them: lomat was on the . social . - aye valued anythieg Macleak viaor in the evenin . nt hoine for in , , hich, unknown to London, i e. Melinda was an: -could tell them ablht where f usual work neer* ffainftwith Egyptians., . In this context ft is worth ...was exactly what he Was? nenthusiestic hostess, and !''Alie West was laving Iter "Tlerite, then a tar tatty aclean wag sadmsanct mentioning the only refer- . - - ence to Philby which seems It would explain several aclean had a strong distastVIIIIIAUM, in what quantithei er in thicejeotildhm, re- ad ten - oil im to occur in Turkish irdelli- gence files: a reference to-2tantLY; it Wbulfil tuzling. Points: most impor- or the after hours oblige- ?' Pars at . lir goes on to ilit.s, . *5 srassthat M50 oft"' wasanudsinatg , riteondioster years, wud,,-i,- 7005, r explain the t.ions of Embassy life. On atsionate defence of Philby eathe cocktail circuit, the couple. irate how little the MacMation -nigh " *hat he eventually 'circulated about M ean's ' meetings with a group of Bul- ?,,,Awhen the security ofileers in y his colleagues in the S I S ,Iliwere noted principally for the xtraordkiary solecism of took until January 1948 to -was withdrawn. No inquiry, diplomat was even asked by - Act had in practice cut off. It ,reported him, and' the pass Cairo peccadilloes. A senior arMn and other East Euro- . t an ? gudents " whom the .: c ine actions of o ng IdlistetihandegY *tending apart, negobate a modus meendi for 'however, was held. Iff I 5 whether he j res were to is d to think ,.* I 5 were convinced that he I./operating the Act, and in that .i When security access to a ?ja t t e n d e d a (temple a a man to Philby's job can be As a common First Secre- ,,period - Maclean in his official -?,building is tightly controlled, :Mythical) party in 9 leliwas a traitor. The were spies. Such contacts ?seem humble work for a man ..,?,_,....__?_, ary, it is doubtful how much " ?capacity had access to inform- , 'Security inside tends to be -.Where Maclean Was su nvho had just been a depart- '`-win'unig indtairlelliehable Zrom treachetz. Unless his ormation of real value ation relating to the estimates -limited. It is clear, from' -,lo haveente _ The more one investigates y. But the truth no defence when something een in a position to supply supply available to the three employees, that Maclea the nature of Philby's work in goes wrong. Very shortly -__ o Moscow. But half way gooravoerniummentsft,,rrecituhiree maetnotmoiof : ?coirtulodall)haavney hrooadmaacacnedssfuesto nBouygsleprwingithlout90:08elbwo energy programmes of the ! he chose. It is clear from the three governments for the 4etegularity of his late-night sm had reached roportions. One nod from 1948 to 1952, and- visits that his intentions were avilefienritnpoeollos.dhionfowsrttMaaiaic bell he liked er the garden-Milt like a dog outside he window to at on, the mental head. friends stand y him, he has aclean would eyer have ; inade at that nine of ore --.?the evidence of former publicly sed Turkey, the more curious it xjooks. In the middle of the after the Turkish tour, things; through his tour in Washing, began to go wrong for Philby, ,??'"' 'ton, he got a job of far nod, hejhas brought back and when they did the S I S ""Oreater significance. The new England for a " James ?, 'rid " mune at aootag h I Yoc- 0? ordinary, apparently inexplic- stood by him with an extra- mbassador, Sir Archibald r ? Gospdrt: sh un- 'able determination. . combat, sabotage. A .- ellow-student says 'that '" He spent a good deal. of - Maclean Philby topped the course. time in Turkey travelling 1 ark-Kerr (Lord Inver- he definition of scientific 'fully satisfied. hapel), himself a political ei;Oreas in which the three gov-',..1 In particular, this meant ntric by F 0 standards, asernments deemed technical 11: whatever restrictive ound hi hi a c 1 e an an co-operation could be acco.vm- specially: eethffect the Maeltfahon A dig appealing sub- plished with mutual benefit.' 7-have on Maclean's access to rdinate. When the post of , Apart from this final txurrent information was null- ' ritish Secrete to the Com- reference to what amounts to"""fied by the revious records' around the Lake Van district, ined Policy ommittee on the entire early blueprint forAiept in greardinail, which he earns ato close to the Soviet border. He M atomic affairs fell vacant, the peacetime atomic energy 'could freely plunder. wrkept a curious souvenir of llaclean was the man programme, General Leslie This work constitutes sound secret,s "eiesignated to fill it. :Groves, father of the . riod, which in later years ? Early M March the; hired a Wide-sailed net off Op the Nile diluter with friends 44elowne 15 miles from Maclean as m stonue P' of ; This committee was the h-lArnerican atomic programme4 sult of the secret Quebec ment bet w een the refeluetvrtopytirecIlipsiyin uch =to. jejanee- "Harriet, e displayed in his Beirut ; of Melia Ararat, which . , 'tliEANWHILE, Donald partment: a large photo- glean s diplomatic ? an on hari has swam. -with espionage?careers had been nited States,. Britain and In 1946, the nitecr isat Even so, r idea s. r. Most People wh()'* develoi in Washington ;;Canada : its main function was 6 t a t e s perfected a newt' he first of his t 11 wo Ar e cog IA is ad the double- espionage on the greed of es tie 'where bestayed as a Firsi? ,to control the exchange of meatdheod ore eor icaotnovehrtiginhg_grlaodw humped shape of Ararat Secretary until September, uranium by processing the atomic information between er ?jisked whether the negative would pudic over that pic- ture, and when some of them s . ..?..theprifno_ree1944, a golden boy of Maclean became secretary waste from South African',-1 ? 1948 He had arrived there in, the three Governments. ign serelee, and g 31rt February, 1947, six months,- ;gold mines. This increased the MCairo?the ?3-twall reversed, It used to ' Mill unustially young for hisando the passage of thaelmatuPPlY and reduced the cost-- -,NacMahon Act which severely in equal measure. The mere ?, 4. ,,,f8 rain is ' Presenting people with this Behind him were four suc--_elfeetricted U S participation in knowledge that it could be 4 ? . amuse Philby enormously. k. tangible evidence of his own cessful wartime years ineid exchange At first sight done would have been of duplicity gave him a perverse London, where he had die: ;* as . critical.-- appears to indicate that ' value to Moscow s --4,00 * - ? thrill. He would usually - .to played his talent for swift, idaclean can have had access Physicists, just as the mere II, p rneostaihoi nodu g significant?thesedulously o0n Knowledge of the practical 'nue imply that he had taken the meticulous disposal of paper z h picture himself though an- work. His efficiency was made veyed in all British Govern- ? other version of the story only- more palatable by his, . inent statements from the Govern- suggests it was really the casual doziness of manner. moment Maclean defected. work of a brilliant Armenian The war years, in fact, were startling new evidence 'reputed to have been one of the best of his diplomat life.- , named " Bill " Ekserdjian, '' has now come to light :which Philby's most effective agents- A ? t II a e the * The picture seems to have 'been a ironic symbol of ? Mratilf3r0aUc ? status. ,throu&itit his ? party But the wind drop Ade voyage took no am. ItIle# 'eve very dni ; 110*as Irked at being wakened at 2 a.m. he refusedIta let them Melinda was the workings of the MacMahon BY NOW, however, there `au- the be4 le" IT Act would have been a rare, were signs of Maclean's ire. throttle ,. her. ,,____' The rational guide to, her late- ..,,cipient crack-up. He never was an - sew will.? i ligence planners. ,found treason an easy natter; over as soonthey Ian But Maclean's " ofeicial his successes seem to have and crack odi. An capacity " stretched beyond borne heavily on him. He /KYfitalt ,_ . these committees into the had begun to drink more _ DY Soule, d time Says that they wit* the. -entirely contradicts this view. peak of the momentunfttdch It consists of the only known ' A E C building itself. This freely: lite with ._iql.inda wat0,---p.artly,w4barrnhi-rant has been disclosed by becoming more dMacult. asa.4...eltelta .' WM aimu quent: Wens, e guarapt Maclean's " _ documentary assessment of , came vividly into the open round his head A f ow ig, These dormant traumas 51.24 wu t? swing fhe eir?1 face -ct an obviousle d Hritiali or American Govern- felleier'A&CA.chaisman. the Mattermade ley either the Achnirg Lewis Strauss, the 'casua ty. In drunken wiittati-JIL--..44111tiallitli-Jia&-ALSo....14i..41iihaleli....A111. member of the Eml-3.t5sy. Approved For Release 2001/07/27 : CIA-RDP75-00149R000600330048-1 ?sn, ,,T1119. 'Tnirrn-ri CC' 'A as one of toe male.; reasotie naturally, for rus success he was noted for hie heavy stammer and his, even, con- te.e. temperemelit Malcolm Muggeridge. how ever, clams to have detected in Phitv at this ttme a quality 'Of ? miPpressed violence and this is an intrieuing in. Light in the Lehi ,? reed psychiatric t -ught about stammering etarnmering is thought to arise from iiihtleseed rage in early child- hood: later, it is often found as part of an enormously power- ful Inhibition against express- ing aggression towards other 989Pio? The strange e in IN , SABIN Minter 1946, by relinquished his Lon- department, and took up ant new post "in " He went to Turkey diplomatic cover be was a " tentport "stationed An I r passport- con- trol work. In fact, of count, his work was espionage The year ,lat this a ?int- .4 merit was to be Mint highligliggd 17 years later in ,the. Brills% Government's rue- 11iiikaltintiaition that they at last Ito.* ibiantmth about Piniby's loealt. The Government, sakLdWrd Heath, was now nrc..e .e nes, an d est, lie nu e arc easy Philby worked from the Fri. 1,h Con, c;ai, v a st barrai es-like building standine in a is ailed com- pound in li(?yegt te the part ei the cit) He esta. blishEd the family in a heaeieeee Asiatic shore ef the Bos- phorus Life was far from auetere, but Peal be clearly found the euieete tiorinee hit wrote to a friend in London: "I wonder why they don't hire the same bus to take the same people to all the same parties. ? Things were enlivened by visits from Guy Burgess on holiday from the Foreign Office in London. Guy's most spectacular exploit was a dive into the Bosphorus from the upper &tog Of the Philby residence: Otesuinably; onlY theinspira of rein zinged his body between the rocks. But the intricacies of his job should have saved Philby from any threat of boredom. The first curiosity abbut It was that he should be doing it: why would the head of a _ other \ ersion of the sters .-1-1gee5,ts it was really the stork of a brilliant Armenian named " Bill " Ekserdjian, reputed to have been one of Nifty s most effective agents The picture seems to have been d ironic symbol of Philby', enigmatic status. Clearly, throughout his Turkish period he was closely in touch with the Soviet in- telligence network; and ceearly his superiors ir London 'pew tlth. But like a detective, a counter- espionage agent in the field can get results by mix- ing with the " criminals " he is trying to catch. The technique had been elaborated by men under Phliby's own command in the war: gaining contact through intermediaries %Ali German agents. and feeding them a skilful blend of true and. false informetisen aboot Bt-tish operations. The vital question is how far Philley's superiors had given him permission to ven- ture into this moral twilight? Had they actually given him Permission to play a " double- agent " game with the Corrections DUE TO an inaccurate identi- fication from last week's picture of the Anglo-German Fellow- ship, it was implied that one of the guests was Margaret. Duchess of Argyll (then Mrs Charles Sweeney), She was not there. Nor, indeed, was any other Duchess of Argyll. peat or present The statement that the code and cypher operation was "run by naval captain Edward Hastings' needs clarification. Although Hastings was in charge of much of the work re- ferred to, the head of the General Cede and Cypher School itself up to 1943 was Com- mander Alastair Denniston. ()rev more palatable by his casual doziness of manner, . The war years, in fact, were the best of his diplomatic life. An eminent colleague of the time says that they were the peak Of the momentum which guaranteed Maclean's subse- quent promotions, even in the face of an obviously declining performance It is not hard to see why he declined. Unlike Kim Philby, Maclean shows every sign of having been deeply troubled by his duplicity and fits subject to traumatic doubt. Genuine ambivalence was always a feature of his brand of Communism. For any Marxist of this particular disposition the alliances of the war were a blessed relief from anguish. In Maclean's case, those years provided no foretaste of the lurid personality break-up to come; they were years when he could serve both his country and his ideology with- out betraying either. Marriage, as the bombs were falling on Paris, had tempered the gregarious, im- pressionable youth of the Left Bank cafe*. He and Melinda, despite bad patches, were close. Their life in Washington was unexcep- tional, and he was widely regarded as worthy rather than brilliant. His main recreation was tennis, which he often played with George Middleton, later head of the F 0 Personnel Department. The two also developed a mixture of water and cigarette butts to keep the insects off their roses in the humid summers. v-eYed irill BritishLOverii- ment statements from the moment Maclean defected. But startling new evidence has now ,come to light which entirely contradicts this view. It consists of the only known doctunentary assessment of the matterenade by either the British or; American Govern- ments: a letter written In 1936 by the State Department to ;Senator. ,James Eastland, chairman of the Senate Inter- nal Security sub-committee, which was then proposing to hold its own investigation into the damage done to the S by Burgess and Maclean. Dated February 21, 1956, and written after discussion with the intelligence agencies, the letter makes clear exactly what were the sensitive cate- gories of information Maclean had access to. In paragraph 10, it states: "He had an opportunity to have access to lnformatiou shared by the three partici- pating countries in the fields of patents, declassification matters and research and development relating to the programme of procurement of raw material from foreign sources by the Combined Development Agency, includ- ing estimates of supplies and requirements." The CD A was the creature of Maclean's C PC. Its essen- tial task was the pre-emptive purchase (mostly from the Belgian Congo) of uranium, which was still thought to be in exceedingly short supply, ahead of the Russians. As well as being able to foment political trouble in Belgium over the C D A's secret deals Act Would have been a rare, rational guide to her intel- ligence planners. But Maclean's "official capacity" stretched beyond these committees into the A E C building itself, This has been disclosed by Admiral Lewis Strauss, the former AE C chairman. Admiral Strauss has des- cribed how he "learned that an alien was the holder of a permanent pass to the Com- mission's headquarters, a ,pass, moreover, which was of a character that did not require him to be accom- panied within the building." The holder of this pass was Donald Maclean Maclean was able to get his pass because the A E C was split over the exchange of atomic information into pro. and anti-British groups. The general manager of the AE C at that time, Prof. Carroll L. Wilson, now of the Massachu- setts Institute of Technology, was in the pro-British group (Strauss was anti). When Maclean's boss, the British representative on CD A, Sir Gordon Munro, approached Wilson for a pass for Maclean Wilson was quite ready to grant it. Wilson recently ad- mitted to the Sunday Times: " Yes. I gave the order for a non-escort pass to be issued . . . I saw no reason why I shouldn't. If I had had any suspicions I would not have done so. But I thought Mac- lean to be safe" The pass was in fact a badge, to be picked up at the desk of the A E C lobby. When Strauss discovered it had been issued, he also discovered that 1, ' Now! MEA Cedarjet holidays talk Golden Lebanon from 03 This winter soak up Middle East sunshine. Eight days inclusive e73aFill in the coupon new. Middle EasiAirl Ines unveil the most glamorous all-in-one holiday idea ever. To Beirut and back plus your hotel accomrpod4tion skartingiat just (73 for 8 days. Bfg chace Or hotels. Sightseeing drives, visits to the world's *gest Casino ?get all the details. Clip the coupon:Send it to Middle East Airlines today. MO IMB nal MI NM VIII INE TO MIDDLE EAST AIRLINES 80 PICCADILLY, LONDON W1. TEL: 01-493 6445 Please send me full details of the new Cedar jet holidays in the Lebanon. NAME ADDRESS ST 15 ID Min NM Mil= MI MOM %ere signs of NfaCie-'an- cipient crack-up. He never found treason an easy matter; his successes seem to have borne heavily on him. He had begun to drink more freely; life with Melinda was becoming more difficult. These dormant traumas came vividly into the open at hes next post, Cairo, to which he was sent from Washington to be Head of Chancery, after e hat in F 0 jargon is called "an acceler- ated promotion." Melinda, with four servants adored the British Raj ele- ment still left in Cairo society (many officials had been transferred from India and had brought their preten- sions with them). She even found a new interest in the social round. Her apogee as a hostess was a party for the Duke of Edinburgh. Deciding fiirolimHprwo touoclodl , olikeargaitbirei4t noisy, adolescent games itka?? "Murder." Tbe royal guest was enchanted. In ? Donald the change, b t out all his latent ag- ns. His occasionally overt anti-Americanism had. aroused little concern Washington; it was shared anyway by many of his em- busy colleagues. But in Cairo he soon reside himself unpopular for " Salable " views. He found the corrupt Farouk regime nauseous and the time-hallowed British policy of ostentatiously. doing nothing abOlit It even more so. ? Instead of getting drunk like a gentleman, -he now embarked on a series of epic, Dylanesque binges. He was arrested by the Egyptian police, dead-drunk and with- out shoes. His hangovers reached such proportions that he was often absent from the office. Eventually the Embassy Security Officer, Major "Sammy" Sansom, took notice. "He was a brilliant chap but highly unreliable,' Sansom recalls. I reported his drinking to Carey Foster (Head of Security in the F 0) direct via the diplomatic bag." Normally such reports would have passed through the Ambassador, but as Maclean was Head of Chancery he would have had to see them first. Sansom, a regular ranker unendowed with diplomatic gifts?" I was the most hated man in the Embassy "?had already clashed with Maclean. To his fury he had been refused permission to initiate spot searches on Embassy staff Sansom also blamed Maclean for losing the fifth copy of a top secret telegram from London. As Cairo was a "Grade A" Embassy' they received copies of important cables from all over the world. Mac- ...lean, as Head of Chancery, had access to even mare than the Ambassador. Sailiones throttle her The second was an American who fell over as soon as they landed and (racked his skull. An Egyptian vratchmau, attracted by the noise, challenged the party with his ancient rifle. Maclean disarmed him and started to swing the gun round his head. A fellow member of the Embassy tried to take it away and slipped down the bank* with six feet four of Maclean on top of him, He finished up with a broken leg. By this time the reluctant host was prevailed on to un- lock his door. The injured American was carried in to a bedroom, and out again when they found their hostess was there, unconscious from drink and wearing only a pair of slacks. Maclean had by now terrified the Egyptian servant into unlocking the drinks cabinet and he took his col- league with the broken leg a bottle of gin as an anaes- thetic. - For a while he was maudlin and coatrite. Then a taxi - arrived and. he refused to ride in it on the eccentric grounds that the driver was an abor- tionist. The battle-stained party got back to Cairo the following afternoon. Miraculously the escapade was hushed up but a second, two months later, got into the Egyptian Press. A writer friend of Maclean's arrived in town and got off to a bad start by meeting an Ambassador's wife without his trousers on (they were being dried after a mishap with a whisky decanter). Later he embarked. on a two-day blind with Maclean and they finished by forcing their way into a flat belonging 1.0 the U S ambassa- dor's secretary. They smashed the furniture, dumped a lot of her clothes in the lavatory, and smashed the bath with a marble shelf, "It was marvellous to see It go up in smithereens," the writer enthused. Maclean's orgy was less a matter for aesthetic pleasure. He dis- liked the girl because she was American. But even during Maclean's Cairo crack-up, the occasions for treason seem not to have eluded him. For in Juke 1948, two months before Maclean left Washington, a new field of ? maximum interest to Soviet intelligence had been opened to him. This was the top secret negotiation of the North Atlantic Pact, the seminal Western initiative in the developing Cold War. Again Maclean's continuing proximity to this is more than a hypothesis. The State Department letter, in one of its most . pointed passages, states Categorically that " Maclean is known to have had knowledge " of the exchanges. But, more than this, the letter suggests that he was familiar with every- thing which "led up to" signature of the Pact in April, 1949: CO 'Cr CD 'Cr 9 Cr) C?1 C?1 171) 5- - 0 LI- 0 5- THE SUNDAY TIMES, 13 OCTOBER 1967 INSIGHT PART Two Or THE PHILP CONSPIRACY PrClIt INV; IP,A ON MEN AND DOGS: Philby (above) at home with mongrel Tessa. Guy Burgess (right), boiler- suited, in Moscow after his defection This gives a fresh perspec- tive to the British Govern-. anent's consistent insinuations that Maclean's postings after Washington provided him with no opportunity for Important espionage. Being a "Grade A' embassy, Cairo was kept informed on British diplomacy across the board. Maclean, as head of Chancery was excellently placed to monitor the continuing Wash- ington talks. The death of a secret army WHILE MACLEAN was still In Cairo, Philby had moved into a new job in Washington. He arrived there in October, 1949, and promptly began the most savagely destructive phase of his career. Washington must have seemed to Philby to be his redemption after the purga- tory of Istanbul. He went to America as liaison man be- tween Britain's SI S and the American C I A. Now he was at the heart of western in- telligence?at a time when, as a top C IA man of the _period said, "relations were closer than they have been between any two services at any time." "You must remember," he said, "that at this time the CIA regarded themselves almost as novices." And Philby was acknowledged as perhaps Britain's most brilliant opera- , Philby had particular value to the CIA at this time. Being the westetti expert on the subject, he virtually set up the CIA's anti-Soviet espionage operation. The damage Philby did during his two years in Wash- ington is almost impossible to assess without considerably greater access to secret infor- mation than any newspaper could hope to obtain. But we have pieced together an account of the worst disaster that was ultimately charged to Philby's acouirt, the Alban- ian debacle. The Volkov incident in 1945 had been a piece of surgery, swift and casually brutal. The Albanian debacle five years later was altogether a more considered and a bloodier affair. What Philby betrayed was an attempt by Britain and America, at the height of the Cold War, to overthrow Russian influence in Albania by means of guerrilla-fomented uprisings. For 17 years this has remained one of the most extraordinary secrets of the Cold War. It has suited both sides to leave it that way. For the West, the Albanian affair was a disaster costing 150 lives. For Russia it was a nasty preview of what could happen in other parts of her uneasy empire. In 1949, the weakest sector of the Russian empire was the Balkans. The Communist rebels in Greece were on the point of collapse. Jugoslavia was Communist but had broken with Russia. Even Albania was unsteady. The Jugoslav Communists had No Albania since the war: notv Tito's cooling had forced Russia to move her own "technicians" and ,,,":advisers 7 into At this point the Foreign Office and the American State Department had the same idea: could Albanian nationalism be harnessed to overthrow Russian influence? Perhaps the process of dis- affection might even be. helped along a bit? Ernest Sevin, the Foreign Secretary, was adamantly opposed to the idea. But the Foreign Office contained a vocal faction in favour of establishing " resistance . movements" in virtually every country of occupied eastern Europe. This was enthusiastically supported by the hairier denizens of S I S, particularly the old S 0 E operators who firmly believed the dictum that " politics is war carried on by other means "?or as it might be, the same means. But, over Albania, Bevin seems to have reckoned without American pressure. So far as the story can be pieced together the factions in the Foreign Office and the S IS appear to have joined forces with the hawks of the State Department. Bevin was persuaded to sanction a " pilot experi- ment" in subversion: a clan- destine operation, to be organised jointly by the S I S and the C I A. to infiltrate guerilla bands into Albania to foment anti-Russian uprisings The man responsible for co-ordinating the British and American halves of the joint operation was, naturally, the British liaison man in Wash- ington, Kim Philby. His ex- perience as ex-controller of the Turkish station?the biggest and most active in that part of the world?made his advice on clandestine operations particularly valu- . rtainlY, 'tile- vocation was well planned. One of the first steps was the formation around the summer of 1949 of a - Committee of Free Albanians ", based in Italy, and apparently a front organ- isation for recruiting gueril- las. In the spring of 1950, the guerrillas were ready to go. First in small groups, then in larger bands, they slipped up into the mountains and over the border into Albania. The plan is said to have been that the groups were to make for their old homes and try to stir up trouble there?taking to the mountains if things got too hot. It was a disaster. The Russians just seemed to know, they were coming. The reception was brisk' and bloody. Within a month, 150 or so guerrillas?about half the total force?were either killed or captured, along with a number of Albanians at home who had been unwise enough to wel-i come the warriors. , The 150 survivors struggleiV, back into Greece?to the em7. barrassment of the Greek! Government. The S IS in, London had hastily to bully, the bewildered Home Office!. into allowing 150 mysterious Albanians into Britain (where a weird "welcome back ",. party was thrown for them at the Caxton Hall in Lon- don). It is unclear whether the Home Office was told the. truth about these refugees_ .J to one source thel' Albanians were improbablyi described as "good friends of ours in Greece , The Ministry of Labour then had the task of finding, work for the crew. In the end, the Forestry Commission,, turned numbers of them inti lumberjacks, and jobs wet invented for most of th; others at an ordnance fac- tory. 1 The post-mortem on th , debacle was prolonged. Afte ; a year opinion was still split. ' The Americans were uneasily convinced of treachery. An what few indications ttier were pointed to Philby, the thought. But in Britain th S I S appear not to have ac-11 cepted even the evidence of treachery. Without the ad-i vantage of hindsight, the evi-{ dence at the time must, certainly have seemed far, from conclusive. But knowing what is now known of Philby, it is clear that the Albanian expedition ?and, indeed, many other, aspects of the information flow between British and American intelligence?must, have been leaked t Russians ,. The eft. totally' 'EV diScretlit itt eyes the-policy of " t interventiim ' in Co nist Europe, and to weaken it for some years in America. Philby would, no doubt, have gone on holding this crucial liaison job for some more years, if it had not been for developments in Maclean's crumbling career at the Foreign Office. Maclean cracks?and is promoted ON MAY 11, 1950, Maclean boarded a London-bound plane from Farouk field. Melinda, now totally unable to cope with him, had gone to the ambassador, Sir Ronald Campbell, pleading for him to be sent home from Egypt. The official verdict, probably accurate enough, was that he ,iwas suffering from a nervous breakdown. After a medical board, the Foreign Office gave him six months leave in London on condition that he underwent a psychiatric course. They had treated him generously largely because senior F 0 officials felt he was arche- typically one of their own. He Looked so right, unlike Bur- :gess, of whom one senior 1, official said after an inter- view: "His qualifications are adequate but what about his 'fingernails'" The six-month break was of i.very dubious benefit. He was , helped through it mainly by an experienced, aristocratic woman friend, one of the few women who ever seems to have understood him. His appointed analyst, a forbid- ding Viennese lady he called "Dr Rosie," was less helpful. Following her advice to accept his homosexuality without guilt. he fell in love with a Negro porter at a Soho club ?he repaid Maclean's dogged devotion by beating him up. Melinda returned from Cairo only reluctantly, after an extended affair with a relative of King Farouk. noted for his virility. Soon she was talking of leaving again. 1 His intelligent woman friend was Maclean's only prop. She met him "recover- ing from D Ts" in the coun- try garden ef Lady Hender- son, mother of " Nikko " ,Henderson, now British Minister in Madrid. He con- fided to her his sexual prob- lems with Melinda and his absurd, unrequited passion ci for the porter. And at her house he hristeried his rater' i" Gordon "?a reference to the tusky boar illustrated on an export gin bottle. He had borrowed the idea from a rumbustious writer friend who had acquired the habit of referring to his own alter ego as "Charlie Pars- ley." He himself was drunk, often and combatively. He looked a wreck. Cyril Connolly was appalled at the decline, which he described with his usual precision: " His face was usually a livid yellow, his hands would tremble. . . . In conversation a kind of shutter would fall as if he had returned to some basic and incommunicable anxiety." At this period Maclean sent a desperate letter from a temporary address in Oxford where he said his diet con- sisted of "sedatives and pints of bitter." His normally in- hibited handwriting lurched down the page as he wrote: "There are two men in a car waiting outside. They've been there for four hours." Are they after me? he asked. And then with the obsessional self-questioning of a man undergoing analysis he writ on to wonder whether he had invented the strangers in the car as a projection of his own guilt. His friends told him it was all paranoiac nonsense. They did not, of course, realise that the remorse went deeper than mere anxiety about the bouts of drunkenness and homo- sexuality. Maclean's real worry was that the security men were on him. The Eumenides with blood on their paws, as he once called them, were out to avenge his treachery in Wash- ington. The other guilt was an invention so he could tell his friends how be felt, though not why. On the Soho circuit, there were few people who did not see him fighting (usually un- successfully). And on one farcical occasion at a club in Carnaby Street he had dived at the painter Rodrigo Moyni- han and bitten him painfully in the knee. The doppelginger Gordon was thoroughly in command. He was also behaving with mounting indiscretion. Mark Culme-Seymour, a friend from pre-war Paris days, remem- bers an evening at the Gar- goyle Club in Dean Street when Maclean lurched about, red-faced accosting other patrons. "Buy me a drink," he said. "I am the English Hiss." But neither these well- known escapades, nor the Cairn debacle. were enough for the Foreign Office to jettison him. By the end of his six months, he was passed tit not merely for employment, but for promotion, as if his career had never been inter- rupted. On Ncnember S. 1951, he became 'Head of the F American Department. Since then. various attempts have been made to downgrade the importance of this post, notably by Harold Macmillan, in the 1955 de,? bate, vs ho said that it dealt' mainly with Latin-American affairs: "The I: S questions which are dealt with . are largely routine, welfare ot forces, visitors and the like." As a description of the de- partment's executive powers, this was true enough. But the best comment on it is nevertheless Senator East- land's scrawled in the margb of the State Dertrnent letter which quoted , "Nuts." Power of action is one. thing, access to informatioN, another. In the Foreign Office what matters as much. as writing policy advice la being on the top " distribution lists" for other departmental material. This was the strength of the Head of the, American Department. For a period after starting? his new job, Maclean seemed am* improved. Every even-, lng he caught the 5.19 from, Charing Cross to Tatsfield int Kent where be and Melindai had bought an ugly house ' called Beaconshaw. But in the new year, 1951, he started drinking heavily once mann. One, night in Mask 'C a flat he said, kpropos of nothing: "What would you do HI said I was working for Uncle Joe?" Later he added that every- thing he did in the American Department was designed to assist Communism. Culme- Seymour wondered Whether he should report this conver- sation, but decided that; Maclean was probably just' drunk. Anyway, he thought, if there was anything in it, MI5 would surely know already. ? The particular help which Uncle Joe was getting is clearly indicated from the State Department's account. It was in two areas: the Japanese Peace Treaty nego- tiations and?what American officials regarded as the most specific item of destructive activity ? the Korean War strategy Te S t ate Department account says that Maclean had full litio% ledge of the cri- tical Ainerion decision to "localise" the Korean conflict. In November, 1950;?just after Maclean had started his new job, President Truman in- structed General MacArthur . not to carry the war across the Manchurian border or to blockade the Chinese coast, even in the event of a Chinese invasion of Korea. MacArthur, backed by hili intelligence chief General C har les Willoughby, wad always convinced that this - ?,priceless information hid reached the Chinese via the , Russians. He went to his graft certain not only of this, which meant that the Chinese could invade with impunity. ..4? but of the enemy's fore- " Anowiedge "of all our-.. strategic troop movements."... - His belief was that the leaky security of the British' was the main culprit, some-, kthing which the State Departti ment document, with specific' reference to Maclean, does nothing to refute and much ??"" to confirm It establishes just how badly Washington judged Itself to have been burned by T- Saina:leany's ure of the cant Amerl- ''?? can The now ' to clOse BUT TT WAS not only Maclean's personal crick-up' - which made hil appointment _remarkable. Even as he took" ir his seat at ttie Amerlcais desk, his 'wally had begun to be dotiMet Tor two years, British security men had been on the trail of alayming atomic leakages, and for at ? least six months Maclean self had been a pritielpid9I' suspect. The net was now be to close. It was known only to the ti t circle in London and W ton. But among those ke informed of every move we the resident SI S man America, Kim Philby. Now, for the first time, ttpir, careers of Maclean and Pobillay became critically intertwined. men it was the fatal For h obuontter. ?? AD AD AD AD OD AD AD AD AD Nar WEEK: 'Third man myste