'BRITISH BUGGED DE GAULLE AND KEPT ME INFORMED,' SAID FRANCO

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP88-01350R000200030027-2
Release Decision: 
RIFPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
December 16, 2016
Document Release Date: 
October 27, 2004
Sequence Number: 
27
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
October 18, 1976
Content Type: 
NSPR
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PDF icon CIA-RDP88-01350R000200030027-2.pdf133.67 KB
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THE LONDON TIMES t`f t'NCcj I"y'f?\JCt5ce, 18 Octobe g76 Approved For Release 200 /0 /13 : CIA-RDP88-01350R00020003&7 ~, Ge eF~~u . fl J L J L - J U R \ . J A - - >w -::r.r tions by the author. The general told his secre- tarv that . General 'tie Gaut-le "made his worst mistake by allowing political parties . . . because parties have always been the cause of agitation and infighting." General hrancu kept: a pho- tograph of Hitler in his study, and said of hint : " Ilitler? was always quite correct with ate and he never showed signs of the bad chat'actcr or trnlpera- ailent which others attributed ? :Aide account of Spanish dictator's conversations aver, the late 4Yest German Chancellor, was "ragnificent" and Mussdlini was " a great patriot ". Thy new national magazine. Opinion, publishing; serialized extracts from the. book, says : "Apparently the Vt?anco-Vitla- verde, family , was not very pleased about the publication `British b~ggedde Gaulle -thd kept: me informer sai. ra cy From Harry Debelius. Madrid, Oct 17 British lntelli ante agents allegedly bugged General de Gaulle's office when he was President of France, and relayed the information to General Franco, according to a book by one of the Spanish ruler's closest aides. .General Franco is quoted 'as - listing told his military secre- tary at -Et Pardo palace in Madrid on December' G 1933, speaking of General de Gaulle: to In nt. The allies have put up stub enough from Iihili,- and they Me .Khrushcllev, the late should not be so considerate Soviet Je.tder, was " sincere wt h. Kira. England took advan.. and peace-loving , Dr Adeli- erned before, and they have had an apparatus installed in his office to record everything de Gaulle said, and afterwards this was copied down by an English Secret Service agent. London kept us informed, and that is why we are perfectly aware of the thoughts and plans of the President of the Government of our neighbour nation." who wrote the . introduction, The book, entitled, My Pri- admits that some passages have vote ... Conversations tuitlt been deleted. Franco., published by Planeta Tile first 45,000 copies of the in 'Barcelona, was written by, book sold out in the first three Lieutenant-General ' Francisco days. Franco Salgado-Aratijo, the The book was edited posthtu- late Spanish ruler's military mnttsly by the widow of the secretary and second cousin author. It includes'tbe author's who died three years before bitter remarks about how Gen- him. era) Franco failed to appre- The book also reveals that ciare all the sacrifices he had General Franco was convinced made on his behalf. that the American Central In- The book, consisting of a telligence Agency was trying series of diary-like c'risodes, to overthrow his regime. Yet begins as follows : "If these he was equally convinced that impressions ?l re published such a policy was mistaken some clay, neither Franco nor and that his police could pro- I will be any longer in this tect him from an assassination world. 'My only proposal is to attempt. Jet the absolute truth be The CIA's goal, in the known, written by one svho. opinion of the general was "to lived close to the Caudillo for implant an American-style many years. who owes him a 1 democracy the day I disappear. c'abt of gratitude like any But they ore mistaken. It will oilier Spaniard but who does only contribute to disorder not forget .that the fatherland will subversion . and only and the loyalty we. owe it are Russia will gain from that." above Franco" As for his own safety, he General Franco is shown to felt that 90 per cent of the Spanish people supported hint. The late President Kennedy's security forces "could not have been more inefficient and disastrous," in the general's ilk only'human failing was General Franco is quoted as opinion. -Spanish police could his passion for hunting and saving : "As you well know, I do better: "If necessa we fish;." General Franco him v n et- en 1 F i t" ry v - , e a a c . just bri,,AppriwedtfcpffReileasef2QrD~i2f/1t2iltiCiAmRQR$8- i 35@1 AtQD 0021ia is from all'tlie provinces." when he was sent on a .temper- only one thing, a Francoite, The book consists of a mix- ar-y assignment to Paris as a and he will be chief of stater lure of verbatim quotes of the young officer, he had firmly until, he dies:' of the ` book." It adds that Senor Miguel juste. the lawyer refused all invitations to explore that city's night life. The secretary complains more than once about the time and public money spent by- General Franco on bunting and fishing trips rather than _ on affairs of state. Shooting expeditions. frequently turned . di f r eo le seek- i ences p nto au o p in g - favours 'and business advantages. After returning from a hunting or fishing trip, the geuertl would often spend up to an hour standing and chauing vitli his ministers .:bout the cat.clh. This obviously bored his secretary, who quotes a remark from General Agustin itluiiox Grandes : "If we do not talk with him about his catch, he will put its all on the retired list." More than General Franco himself, the people who stir- rounded him come in for cri- Iicistn. _ The general's wife, Senora Carmen Polo de Franco, was " absurdly haughty"_ The first Vice- President, General 1\Mmox Grandes, is said to have had his eye on General Franco's job.. Receptions. at El. Pardo palace were full of people who were playacting? and General Franco's personality was too chilly to break down the bar- rier of sham and adulation. The Caudillo is it very kind elan but cold, very cold. Many times lie has left his friends frozen.... This attitude is more pronounced: when his wife is present" . Ile was playing off one fac- against another and one tion personality against another, lis- telling to each - The Caudillo never IN,. r anything. He lives contented and seems to ignore mood, public opinion and many other things, preferring to believe only what his ministers =tell In 1955 the general told his secretary : "At the end of the war the victors wanted to make sure that the nations they defeated would not rise rounded. by flatterers, . social them to adopt the democratic climbers, power hungry people system, knotting full well that'l and people seeking personal this would never bring them LIC LW/- e4? % tr rrv5 .. C, x FPW,