Scarecrow Press, 2009. — 581 p. No country can rival the sheer diversity of intelligence organizations that Germany has experienced over the past 300 years. Given its pivotal geographical and political position in Europe, Germany was a magnet for foreign intelligence operatives, especially during the Cold War. As a result of this, it is no wonder that during certain periods of...
New York: Henri Rogowski Linotype Co, 1916. — 45 p. Why I deserted the Kaiser's Secret Service and came to America, after Perilous Journey from South Africa, through England and Holland to Germany and out again, over Rotterdam and London, during the Great War.
Toronto: Dundurn, 2014. — 252 p. Note to the Reader. Prologue: Corrupt? Inefficient? Stupid? A Spymaster’s Incredible Story. Hitler’s Enemy Within. That “Stupid Little Man”. A Little Too Easy, Perhaps? The Abwehr Spreads Its Net. Canaris Betrays the Cause. E-186: The Spy Inside. Names to the Flames. Birmingham is Burning. CELERY Hits the Jackpot. Menzies Wants to Know. Red Sun...
Enigma Books, 2009. — 405 p. Hitler’s Intelligence Chief is a biographical portrait of SS General Walter Schellenberg during the final months of the Third Reich as he accompanied Heinrich Himmler while attempting to save his own life. Schellenberg was part of the Nazi leadership, although he never was directly involved in killing. In 1945, he negotiated the freeing of twenty...
London: John Lane and Bodley Head Limited, 1930. — 356 p. Gustav Steinhauer was born in Berlin c. 1870. He was an officer of the Imperial German Navy who in 1901 became head of the British section of the German Admiralty's intelligence service, the Nachrichten-Abteilung, 'N'. He had trained at the Pinkerton Detective Agency in Chicago and spoke fluent English with an American...
Frontline Books, 2014. — 248 p. This gripping book tells the remarkable story of Germany's special forces - military, naval and aerial - during the Second World War. Although capable of stunning achievements against all the odds, the absence of proper coordination and planning resulted in a lost opportunity for Germany. Units were raised ad hoc, as an increasingly desperate...
Quantico: Marine Corps University Press, 2008. — 73 p. Operation "Knight's Move" or operation "Rosselsprung" (it. Unternehmen "Rösselsprung"), in Yugoslav historiography also known as the" Seventh enemy offensive " (serbohorv. Sedma neprijateljska ofenziva / Sedma neprijateljska ofanziva), or Landing on Drvar (serbohorv. Desant na Drvar is a combined airborne and ground...
Fort George G. Meade: Center for Cryptologic History National Security Agency, 2011. — 104 p. United States Cryptologic History,Series IV, World War II, Volume 11 The German Intelligence Services Perspective The Abwehr The Reich Security Administration Axis Agent Operations in Latin America SARGO The Brazilian Nets Regrouping The Chilean Nets Operation JOLLE MERCATOR I and...
Greenhill Books, 2018. — 336 p. Hitler's daring and pioneering Brandenburgers special forces served in every German theatre of action. This is the most comprehensive account of an unusual and profoundly successful band of men. Lawrence Paterson traces the origins of the small unit, before the outbreak of war in 1939, as the brainchild of Admiral Canaris and part of his Abwehr...
Second edition. — Toronto: MacMillan Company, 1909. — 347 p. No sane person can deny that England is in grave danger of invasion by Germany at a date not far distant This very serious fact I endeavoured to place vividly before the public in my recent forecast, The Invasion of igio, the publication of which, in Germany and in England, aroused a storm of indignation against me....
FBI. — 193 p. Long, detailed WWII-era report on a Nazi clandestine radio network that operated in South America between 1940 and 1942 and was used by German spies to send intelligence reports back to Berlin and Hamburg. Known to the FBI as "Radio CEL," the network comprised multiple clandestine radio stations across South America, with the main station in Brazil, led by the...
FBI. — 193 p. Long, detailed WWII-era report on a Nazi clandestine radio network that operated in South America between 1940 and 1942 and was used by German spies to send intelligence reports back to Berlin and Hamburg. Known to the FBI as "Radio CEL," the network comprised multiple clandestine radio stations across South America, with the main station in Brazil, led by the...
University Press of Kentucky, 2008. — 258 p. When Heinz Luning posed as a Jewish refugee to spy for Hitler's Abwehr espionage agency, he thought he had discovered the perfect solution to his most pressing problem: how to avoid being drafted into Hitler's army. Luning was unsympathetic to Fascist ideology, but the Nazis' tight control over exit visas gave him no chance to escape...
The History Press, 2014. — 192 p. — ISBN: 9780750957298. The title is a bit problematic as Hitler did not personally employ this spy and although the info the latter provided was valuable, neither benefited in the end. There is some poetic justice to it all.
The History Press, 2012. — 192 p. John Eppler thought himself to be the perfect spy. Born to German parents, he grew up in Egypt, adopted by a wealthy family and was educated in Europe. Fluent in German, English and Arabic, he made the Hadj to Mecca but was more at home in high society or travelling the desert on camelback with his adopted Bedouin tribe. After joining the...
Maryland: University Publications of America Inc., 1984. — 321 p. — ISBN: 0-89093-543-2 Published here for the first time are two hitherto classified studies of German military intelligence in World War II. One was done by American intelligence and the other by an Allied team. Both were completed shortly after the war in Europe ended. The first is The German G-2 Service in the...
Hersham: Ian Allan Publishing, 2003. — 96 p. Situated between Sicily and the North African Coast, the Mediterranean island of Malta was, from the early 19th century, a British territory. Malta's importance to the British Empire and to the cause of freedom was never greater than during World War 2, when its location made it of vital strategic importance to both Britain and to...
Praeger, 1999. — 281 p. The episode of the opportunistic valet of Britain's ambassador to neutral Turkey during World War II--dubbed "Cicero" for the eloquence of the top-secret material he appropriated from his employer Sir Hughe Knatchbull-Hugessen and sold to the Nazis--is a staple of intelligence lore. Yet this remarkable and sometimes comical story has often been recounted...
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