TRIPLEX reveals more clearly than ever before the precise nature and extent of the damage done to the much-vaunted British intelligence establishment during World War II by the notorious Cambridge Five” spy ringKim Philby, Donald Maclean, Guy Burgess, Anthony Blunt, and John Cairncross. The code word TRIPLEX refers to an exceptionally sensitive intelligence source, one of the most closely guarded secrets of the war, which appears nowhere in any of the British government’s official histories. TRIPLEX was material extracted illicitly from the diplomatic pouches of neutral missions in wartime London. MI5, the British Security Service, entrusted the job of overseeing the highly secret assignment to Anthony Blunt, who was already working for the NKVD, Stalin’s intelligence service. The rest is history, documented here for the first time in rich detail.
Author(s): Mr. Nigel West, Oleg Tsarev
Publisher: Yale University Press
Year: 2009
Language: English
Pages: 377
Contents......Page 6
Note on the Translation......Page 8
List of Abbreviations......Page 10
Introduction......Page 14
1. The Swedish Naval Attaché......Page 18
2. Japanese Suspects, October 1941......Page 22
3. Neutral Attachés in London, September 1943......Page 24
4. Diplomatic Missions in London......Page 27
5. MI5’s History......Page 39
6. Colonel Vivian’s Briefing, 1943......Page 117
7. ISOS, March 1943......Page 121
9. SIS Sources for Strategic Appreciations......Page 124
10. C’s Directive, September 1944......Page 126
11. Report from Philby, December 1944......Page 127
12. Philby’s Memo to C, November 1944......Page 128
13. Section IX Personnel......Page 129
14. Commander Dunderdale’s SLC, July 1945......Page 131
15. Memo on Penetrating Russia......Page 133
16. Colonel Vivian’s Reply to the Memo......Page 142
17. SIS Symbols, 23 July 1947......Page 144
18. SIS Internal Country Codes Used Up to the Second Half of 1946......Page 145
19. Report on SIS Reorganisation, July 1945......Page 147
20. Colonel Vivian’s Memo, September 1944......Page 151
21. The XK Problem in SIS, 6 September 1944......Page 154
22. Report on the Mediterranean Inspection, August 1944......Page 158
23. Report on the Western Mediterranean Inspection, August 1944......Page 171
24. The Structure of SIS......Page 178
25. The Reorganisation of SIS......Page 182
26. Telegrams from SIS’s Moscow Station, July 1942......Page 183
27. SIS Plans for Anti-Soviet Operations, June 1944......Page 186
28. Blueprint for SIS’s Post-War Organisation......Page 188
29. Symbols of SIS’s Senior Personnel......Page 195
30. SIS’s Internal Structure, March 1946......Page 196
PART III. John Cairncross’s Documents......Page 202
31. Lord Hankey’s Inquiry into SIS and MI5, 1940......Page 203
33. Philby’s Letter to Peter Loxley, September 1944, with the Curry Memorandum on Soviet Espionage......Page 246
34. Peter Loxley’s Letter to Colonel Vivian, November 1944......Page 261
PART IV. NKVD Reports......Page 263
35. Confession of the SIS Agent Aleksandr S. Nelidov......Page 264
36. British Deception Schemes, May 1944......Page 286
37. MI5 Surveillance of Foreign Diplomatic Missions......Page 311
38. MI5’s Targeting of Foreign Diplomatic Missions in London......Page 328
39. Elena Modrzhinskaya’s Report, April 1943......Page 330
40. Dossier on Harold Gibson, September 1949......Page 348
A......Page 358
B......Page 359
C......Page 360
D......Page 362
E......Page 363
F......Page 364
H......Page 365
I......Page 366
L......Page 367
M......Page 368
P......Page 370
R......Page 372
S......Page 373
V......Page 375
Z......Page 376