The Baghdad Set_ Iraq through the Eyes of British Intelligence, 1941–45
112 oriental languages at the London University School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS) before joining MI6, died suddenly ...
113 Survey of Global Activities, War Diary 44, September–December 1942, HS 7/267, TNA. Ibid. London Gazette, 9 December 1921, 1 ...
114 Report by Hilton Nixon (D/HX), DHX/ME/1632, 30 December 1943, Survey of Global Activities, War Diary 46, July–September 194 ...
© The Author(s) 2019 115 A. O’Sullivan, The Baghdad Set, https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-15183-6_6 CHAPTER 6 The Moon Palace L ...
116 broke out, he was recommissioned and rejoined the Guides in 1939. At some point during this period, probably after reaching ...
117 For many years before the Second World War, intelligence in Iraq had been the responsibility of RAF ‘I’ Branch, which consis ...
118 experience as GSO1 to the Iraqi army (1925–1928), when he spent much time among the Kurds.^10 When Elphinston assumed comman ...
119 all three services, CICI was to be responsible for such interservice tasks as security, civil censorship, propaganda, and pu ...
120 friend: ‘I don’t want to be thought to criticize military intelligence—I fully realize that there are some people who are so ...
121 new interservice formation, there was no apparent reason for replacing the administrative infrastructure too, as the RAF had ...
122 these factors contributing to instability and insecurity was the fact that Iraq was such a vulnerable, politically immature ...
123 records. In fact, they were of such quality that they were used extensively not just by CICI and PAIFORCE personnel but also ...
124 (MOFA). Intelligence centres in Iraq, India, Palestine, and Egypt possessed books of agent personality sheets, known as ‘MOF ...
125 also served as director of government purchasing and as an adviser to the Ethiopian foreign ministry. It was in this capacit ...
126 Iraq of persons whose records would require them to be kept under obser- vation. To meet this request, it was arranged with ...
127 of travellers at frontier posts who had carelessly revealed that they pos- sessed incriminating articles. Partly perhaps bec ...
128 States and the Soviet Union that were unloaded at the Shatt al-Arab for overland rail and road transport through Persia to t ...
129 near the Persian frontier and at Kirkuk in Kurdistan, similar problems were to be found, but on a much reduced scale. Intern ...
130 records section was placed completely at the disposal of OSS, and OSS were careful to have their reports checked by DSO befo ...
131 had not put the RAF ‘I’ Branch records to the flames, though he was on the verge of doing so shortly before the siege of Hab ...
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