The Baghdad Set_ Iraq through the Eyes of British Intelligence, 1941–45
233 for his reports.^57 Having lived for many years in northern Iraq, ‘Craig’ was in close touch with certain British officials ...
234 and delicate.’^62 Elsewhere, Kellar wrote: ‘American commercial interests in the area and their strong sympathy for the Jewi ...
235 the acquisition and exchange of intelligence between OSS and CICI left Steve Penrose in Cairo and his field agents in Iraq w ...
236 behaviour which would make him persona non grata just at a time when he could be of greatest service.^68 To Allen he wrote: ...
237 United States and married (happily) a Ukrainian emigrée whom he had met in Persia. After a spell in Walla Walla, Washington, ...
238 Penrose to Shepardson, 27 July 1944, Folder 7, Box 5, Series 8 (OSS), Penrose Papers, Whitman College and Northwest Archive ...
239 a mysterious ‘Mr E. Dayton’ shown as a regular recipient of British intel- ligence and security summaries. The giant United ...
240 Otherwise known as Die schwarze Front (The Black Front). For all their leftist, pro-Bolshevik ideology, the Strasserists we ...
241 Penrose to Loud, 28 July 1943, Record Group 226, Entry 215, Box 3, NARA; see also ECOP, 212. Penrose to Loud, 28 July 1943, ...
242 Failure of the German Intelligence Services, 1939–45 (Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2014) [NSW], 215–16. Leary to Loud, ...
243 Crawford to Allen, 1 August 1944, Record Group 226, Entry 217, Box 1, NARA. The only other Western active-espionage operat ...
244 Report of visit by Mr. A.J. Kellar to the Middle East, February 1945, KV 4/384, TNA. For more about Kellar, who ran the Mi ...
© The Author(s) 2019 245 A. O’Sullivan, The Baghdad Set, https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-15183-6_11 CHAPTER 11 Epilogue: The B ...
246 an interest in the orient, and, in some cases, even family kinship. And, once undercover, they did what they did—‘their bit, ...
247 in the evening, so too the besieged residents of the Baghdad embassy usually dressed formally for dinner with the ambassador ...
248 to Iraq and the Abwehr outstation in Istanbul might provide soft entry- points into some dramatic, though relatively noncont ...
249 Hodgkin, who was the grandson of the celebrated Oxford historian and Master of Balliol A.L. Smith. Improbably perhaps, Hodgk ...
250 doubtless many of his friends—viewed as a mariage de convenance, while Stark obviously had higher hopes. They would separate ...
251 returned to Fleet Street in 1947, where he worked mostly for The Times, as leader writer and assistant editor. Another fine ...
252 becomes a white-hot metallic shaft boring into one’s skull and scorching one’s flesh. By embracing these adversities as they ...
«
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
»
Free download pdf