Historical Dictionary of German Intelligence

(Kiana) #1
British Broadcasting Company and later with the police department in
Hanover. Most significant was his leadership of the Ostbüro der SPD
from November 1948 to its dissolution in 1971.

THÜMMEL, PAUL (1902–1945). A double agent in the Abwehr who
worked for Czech and then British intelligence, Paul Thümmel was
born in Neuhausen (Saxony) on 15 January 1902. Trained as a baker,
he assisted in the formation of the local Nazi Party organization in



  1. After Adolf Hitler’s accession to power, his friendship with SS
    chief Heinrich Himmler helped him secure a position in the Abwehr
    branch in Dresden. Yet as a conservative nationalist in the mold of
    Abwehr head Wilhelm Canaris, Thümmel increasingly feared that
    Nazi policies would plunge Germany into a ruinous war. In March
    1937, František Moravec, the head of Czech military intelligence, re-
    ceived a letter from Thümmel containing secret German mobilization
    plans and offering further information in return for money. Despite
    his initial suspicion, Moravec agreed to the arrangement, and Thüm-
    mel, assigned the code name a-54, soon became the Czechs’ most
    prized asset.
    Even after the 1938 Munich Agreement delivered Czechoslovakia
    into German hands, he continued to supply Moravec with high-level
    material, including plans for the total occupation of the country in

  2. That event, however, forced the air evacuation of Moravec and
    his senior officers to London with the assistance of the Secret Intelli-
    gence Service (SIS) station chief in Prague, Harold Gibson. Moravec
    permitted his service to be run as a surrogate of SIS, while Thüm-
    mel’s information regarding planned military offensives against Hol-
    land, Belgium, France, and Great Britain was conveyed through the
    Czech resistance. After the seizure of the radio transmitter of his new
    Czech contact Václav Morávek, the Gestapo increasingly directed its
    suspicion at Thümmel as the probable traitor. Arrested on 13 October
    1941, he denied all charges and enlisted support not only from Cana-
    ris but from Himmler and Nazi Party leader Martin Bormann.
    Despite Thümmel’s release in late November, Reinhard Hey-
    drich, head of the Reichssicherheitshauptamt, continued to pursue
    the case, looking at the circumstantial evidence of several other
    related instances of espionage. On 22 February 1942, Thümmel was
    rearrested at a routine conference in Prague and taken to a remote


THÜMMEL, PAUL • 461
Free download pdf