Friday, February 19, 2010

Agent Knopf, the Unsung Spy Hero of WW-II

February 13, 2010
By: Ben Macintyre
The Times




Uncovered Documents Reveal Spy Who Fed Information on Hitler’s Secrets

MI6 obtained vital secrets from a spy operating at the very heart of Hitler’s high command during the most crucial years of the war, newly discovered intelligence documents have revealed.

The secret agent, code-named “Knopf”, furnished the intelligence service with information on Hitler’s plans in the Mediterranean and on the Eastern Front, the health of Field Marshal Erwin Rommel and even the location of the “Wolf’s Lair” — the Führer’s headquarters in Eastern Prussia.

Historians have tended to play down the wartime role of MI6 — in comparison with the crucial importance of the messages decoded at Bletchley Park — but the discovery of Agent Knopf by the Cambridge historian Paul Winter shows that Britain obtained accurate and highly valuable intelligence from a network of agents in the upper ranks of the Third Reich.

The documents, uncovered in the Churchill Archives in Cambridge and the National Archives, show that Knopf and his sub-agents alerted British Intelligence to German plans for an invasion of Malta in 1942, relayed Rommel’s intentions in North Africa and revealed Hitler’s fatal obsession with capturing Stalingrad on the Eastern Front.

The Führer was “determined to capture Stalingrad at all costs”, Knopf reported. Hitler’s disastrous assault on the Russian city, which led to the destruction of the German 6th Army, is seen as a turning point in the war.

Agent Knopf was initially recruited and run by Polish Intelligence. In 1940, the Polish Government in exile in London agreed to hand over all its intelligence material to the Secret Intelligence Service [SIS], better known as MI6, providing Britain with a steady stream of top-grade intelligence for the rest of the war.

The archives of MI6 remain closed, and the real identity of Agent Knopf may never be known but the newly uncovered documents indicate that the star spy was a German with access to high-grade military information.

One British intelligence report noted: “The source, of whom the Poles think very highly, is not himself a Pole. He has not specified his informants, but states that they are highly placed and in touch with the German High Command.”

Dr Winter said: “The discovery of Agent Knopf and his fellow spies shows for the first time that Britain’s SIS gained a unique entrée into German operational and strategic thinking during the most critical phases of the war. We may never know their true identities or respective fates, but their audacity and courage are beyond doubt.”

The officer in charge of liaising between Polish and British Intelligence was Commander Wilfred “Biffy” Dunderdale, the former MI6 station chief in Paris. A friend of Ian Fleming, who was then working in naval intelligence, Biffy Dunderdale was one of the models for the character of James Bond.

Dunderdale and MI6 were plainly delighted with the stream of accurate intelligence arriving in Whitehall via the Polish Secret Service.

In an appraisal of the spy, written in April 1943 for Alan Brooke, the Chief of Imperial General Staff, it was noted that: “Knopf forecast very closely the general outline of the German summer campaign in Russia. Many of his reports were clear and factual and showed an accuracy of detail which precludes the possibility that he was indulging in intelligence guessing.”

Knopf’s reports were certainly read by Winston Churchill, and the intelligence he provided would have underpinned the Prime Minister’s overall war strategy.

Knopf apparently sent his reports by wireless, since the report on his work by MI14, the War Office’s German section, refers to “errors in transmission” such as misspelt names.

MI6 was able to confirm Knopf’s information, and ensure he was not a double agent feeding false information, by cross-checking his reports against the German messages decrypted by the code-breakers at Bletchley Park, known as “Most Secret Sources”.

Between February 1942 and February 1943, Knopf supplied his handlers with at least ten separate reports on German strategy and operations on the Eastern Front, including the date of Hitler’s main offensive against the Soviet Union and the “grouping of the armies”.

The spy also identified the location of the Wolfsschanze, or Wolf’s Lair, Hitler’s fortified military headquarters on the Eastern Front. The lair was built in the woods of Eastern Prussia in the run-up to Operation Barbarossa, the Nazi invasion of the Soviet Union, and Hitler spent many months there between 1941 and November 1944. The British noted that Knopf’s “accurate information on... the position of Hitler’s HQ [is] confirmed from Most Secret Sources”.

At the time Knopf was reporting, Churchill and Stalin were allies in the battle against Nazi Germany but it is not known whether the intelligence obtained by Britain relating to the Eastern Front was passed to Moscow.

While gratefully accepting Polish Intelligence, Britain was secretly spying on the Polish Government in exile by intercepting and decoding its messages. These intercepted messages provided additional evidence of Knopf’s value and reliability as a spy.

One such interception referred to “secret service agents No.594”, a network of Polish-run penetration agents closely connected to the Oberkommando der Wehrmacht (OKW), the High Command of the German Armed Forces. It is clear that “secret service agents No.594” and “Knopf” are one and the same.

For example, both “Knopf” (in material passed on by the Poles) and “594” (in material secretly intercepted by Britain) reported that Rommel, the German commander of Axis forces in North Africa, had been “temporarily recalled [to Germany] owing to dangerous symptoms of defective blood circulation caused by overexhaustion and the African sun”. The language in both reports is identical.These agents demonstrated their worth on June 19, 1941, when a report arrived at the Polish Government in London warning that a German invasion of the USSR was imminent. Operation Barbarossa was launched three days later.

The same sources later informed the Polish secret service when the German offensive in the East ground to a bloody halt. Hitler, they reported, was demanding that “further offensive operations should be undertaken in the region of Stalingrad until it capitulates, and as regards the capture of the city no account is to be taken of losses”.

Britain’s spymasters were understandably nervous that Knopf might be a double agent, but an internal appraisal reflects how much confidence MI6 had in the agent: “There can be no doubt that JX/Knopf [JX is shorthand for “Polish Source”] has very good contacts and that much of his information is sound... Knopf has very seldom been guilty of passing on rumours or plants.” Historians have long assumed that human intelligence played only a minor part in the war, and that signals intelligence, the interception and decryption of wireless messages, was the determining factor. Dr Winter’s research proves not only that Britain had top-level agents within the German High Command, but that these provided crucial intelligence.

Inevitably, the discovery raises additional questions.

Who were Knopf and his informants? How much of the intelligence was passed to Britain’s allies in Moscow and Washington, and how did it affect strategic planning? Above all, what happened to Knopf and his co-conspirators?

“Historians may never know the true identities of ‘Knopf’/‘secret agents No.594’ nor why they risked their lives to spy for the Allies,” writes Dr Winter in his thesis. Unless MI6 chooses to declassify its wartime files, Agent Knopf, the unsung spy hero of the Second World War, will remain nameless.


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Monday, February 8, 2010

Medvedev Highlights CI

Medvedev Calls on Counter-intelligence to Protect State Secrets
28 January, 2010, 18:25
RT

Counter-intelligence should remain a key priority for Russia’s Security Service (FSB) because of spies’ interest in state secrets, President Dmitry Medvedev said during a meeting with the agency’s board.

"The foreign special services' interest in our state secrets and newest developments remains high," Medvedev said. Therefore, the president urged the country’s intelligence to respond promptly “to any attempts to collect classified information”. Criminal cases should be initiated whenever such facts are spotted.

For his part, the head of state promised to provide support for the agency and its employees.

The focus of Medvedev’s meeting senior FSB officials on Thursday was, quite obviously, state security. Among major tasks in that respect the president named the necessity to provide the most up-to-date equipment at Russian borders.

"The border should have modern equipment installed, and much has been accomplished in this field in the recent past,” he said as quoted by Itar-Tass. “Also, the border must be convenient for citizens and the development of trade-economic relations with partners."

He drew the officials’ attention to the new rules for the border guards following the launching of the Customs Union of Russia, Belarus and Kazakhstan.

Meanwhile, Moscow will continue helping Abkhazia and South Ossetia to strengthen their borders.

"It is a special task for the Border Service, in connection with the commitments Russia has undertaken," he said.

Following the war in South Ossetia launched by Georgia in August 2008, Russia recognized the independence of the two Caucasian republics and has been providing support for the new states.

According to the Russian Ambassador to Abkhazia, Sergey Grigoryev, within the next three years the republic will receive over $300 million from the Russian budget as part of an agreement to provide help towards Abkhazia's socio-economic development.

Terrorism remains main threat

President Medvedev said that he is satisfied with the FSB’s work in 2009 and the agency managed to accomplish its tasks. Over 80 terrorist attacks were prevented and 500 leaders and members of militant groups were neutralized, thanks to security forces efforts.

However, "criminal attacks in Ingushetia, Dagestan and Chechnya show that terrorism is the main threat for society," he cautioned.

Therefore, Medvedev has called on the federal security service to continue "systematic work to neutralize criminal groups, their leaders and people who carry out terrorist attacks." He added that terrorism had to be fought by the authorities and society together.

Not a single week passed without reports of attacks on officials and security forces in Russia’s North Caucasus region in 2009. As a result of the surge in violence, over 230 police officers and troops were killed and over 680 wounded.

In an attempt to bring stability to the region, in January this year, President Medvedev established a new, North Caucasian, federal district. Former Siberian governor and business executive Aleksandr Khloponin was appointed deputy prime minister and president's envoy to the district.

The President said he hoped the newly-appointed official would manage to cope with the region's worst evil – corruption.

"[The corruption level] is high in the whole country, and exceptionally high in the Northern Caucasus, and it is necessary to bring order to local authorities. We must strictly control the use of budgetary funds, because the allocations are large and the efficiency [is low] as you all know," Medvedev was quoted by Interfax. "In turn, I will keep an eye on governors and law enforcers," he added.

Khloponin was present at Thursday’s meeting, along with Presidential Administration Chief Sergey Naryshkin, Supreme Court Chairman Vyacheslav Lebedev, Prosecutor General Yuri Chaika, Security Council Secretary Nikolay Patrushev, Deputy Prime Minister Sergey Ivanov and Deputy Prime Minister Igor Sechin.


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Wednesday, February 3, 2010

Case Officers for Rent?

CIA Allows Agents to Moonlight
The CIA is allowing operatives to moonlight by selling their espionage expertise to financial firms, according to a new book.

By Toby Harnden in Washington
Telegraph
Published: 6:20PM GMT 02 Feb 2010

Officials said the policy was needed to stop top CIA officers from leaving the spy agency, where the millions spent on their training can help command very high salaries. In recent years, there has been an exodus if CIA officers at a time when the US is fighting two wars and leading international efforts against al-Qaeda.

In one instance, agents worked at a New York hedge-fund consulting firm that wanted to draw on their skills in "deception detection" - the art of picking up clues in body language and conversation to ascertain when executives might be lying.
Officials said that the out-of-hours work did not compromise national security and was only allowed once CIA officers had submitted full details of the work and been granted permission.

It is not known how long the policy has been in place or how many CIA officers work for outside organisations. The policy is an indication of the attractiveness of CIA techniques to financial institutions.

In an article for Politico.com, Javers highlighted a Boston-based firm called Business Intelligence Advisors (BIA) that was founded by retired CIA officers and specialises in deception detection.

Its clients included one of the world's leading investment banks and a hedge fund. BIA has previously employed active-duty CIA officers in the past but the company said that has not that happened for some time.

One person who attended a 2006 presentation to hedge fund managers by BIA in Stamford, Connecticut said that one of the briefers had 20 years in the CIA and specialised in the polygraph lie detector and interviewing while another was a former interrogator.

The two women were so intense that they reminded the person of Clarice Starling, the FBI agent played by Jodie Foster in the film The Silence of the Lambs. "You could tell they knew exactly what they were doing," he said.

George Little, a CIA spokesman, said: "If any officer requests permission for outside employment, those requests are reviewed not just for legality, but for propriety."


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