Historical Dictionary of British Intelligence
BEST, SIGISMUND• 47 French, during which he made no mention of having been suspected of having stolen large sums from the Soviet ...
48 • BEST, SIGISMUND his origins and a lasting inferiority complex. During World War I, his poor eyesight and his knowledge of F ...
BETTANEY, MICHAEL• 49 by SIS. In his submissions to the bankruptcy courts, he consistently described himself as an intelligence ...
50 • BEURTON, URSULA When Bettaney was arrested at his home in September 1983, as he was preparing to fly to Vienna with another ...
BEURTON, URSULA• 51 cement their marriage, which was under strain, primarily because of political differences. ‘‘I could not tal ...
52 • BEVAN, JOHN biography was published in 1977. She died in 2000, soon after the loss of her husband. BEVAN, JOHN.John Bevan w ...
BINGHAM, DAVID• 53 1966 and a second autobiography,Coronet among the Grass,was released in 1974. After her education at the Sorb ...
54 • BINGHAM, JOHN alternative therapy center, and being elected a vice president of the Bournemouth Conservative Club. He was k ...
BINGHAM, MADELEINE• 55 Intelligence Services. One school is convinced that they are staffed by murderous, powerful, double-cross ...
56 • BITOV, OLEG Service, which warned her that no such book would be tolerated. As she herself had worked forMI5, she was in a ...
BLAKE, GEORGE• 57 ralized citizen following his war service in World War I. He was educated in Holland and Egypt and joined his ...
58 • BLEICHER, HUGO Choice. Despite the British government’s legislation to prevent for- mer intelligence personnel from disclos ...
BLUNT, ANTHONY• 59 set in a private estate in what is now the new town of Milton Keynes. It was bought by AdmiralSir Hugh Sincla ...
60 • BLUNT, ANTHONY illegalArnold Deutsch. With help from his brother, a territorial of- ficer, Blunt succeeded in acquiring a c ...
BOER WAR• 61 BODYGUARD.Code name for thedeceptioncampaign to cover the Allied invasion of Europe in June 1944.bodyguardhad vario ...
62 • BOHR, NIELS at fault for not having sent reinforcements out early, even if there had been a wish not to appear provocative. ...
BOND, JAMES• 63 Americans were General R. H. McClure, Colonel H. G. Sheen, and R. D. Coe from the U.S. Embassy. Thebolerosecreta ...
64 • BOND, JAMES Another of several possible candidates for Bond wasConrad O’Brien-Ffrench, a dashing figure who undertook cland ...
BOTHWELL, JOHN• 65 sheer imagination, but it is very likely that BSC did mount some clandestine surveillance operation to monito ...
66 • BOURKE, SEAN two children could be educated in England. During interrogation while he spent five weeks in Wormwood Scrubs p ...
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