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#24 - RW 12-17-04 - RW Home
Context (Moscow Times)
December 17-23, 2004
Secrets of the Service
Legend has it that Kim Philby fooled U.S. and British intelligence for years
while passing on information to the Soviets. S.J. Hamrick sees things
differently.
By Carl Schreck
Deceiving the Deceivers: Kim Philby, Donald Maclean and Guy Burgess By S.J.
Hamrick Yale University Press 297 Pages. $29.95
On the face of it, the 19th-century French stilt walker Sylvain Dornon would
seem to have little in common with British intelligence officer Harold Adrian
Russell "Kim" Philby, one of the 20th century's most notorious spies. Dornon
made his name in 1891 with an epic 58-day journey on stilts from Paris to
Moscow. Philby made his reputation by staying one step ahead of British and U.S.
authorities while passing on their darkest, most dangerous secrets to the Soviet
Union, and then suddenly defecting to Moscow in 1963.
What the two do share, according to "Deceiving the Deceivers," former U.S.
foreign service officer S.J. Hamrick's speculative yet intriguing reappraisal of
the legend of Philby's spy ring, the Cambridge Five, is that special strain of
notoriety reserved for feats of only the most extreme daring. Dornon may not
have been a secret agent, nor British for that matter, but his exploits
transformed him into a celebrity in his own time just as Philby's did more than
half a century later. "Notoriety is indiscriminate," Hamrick writes. "It claims
the great and the small, the courageous, the cowardly, the infamous and the
obscure, the Lindberghs, the Lord Haw-Haws, even Sylvain Dornon."
Drawing on the Venona archive of Soviet intelligence cables transmitted to
and from Moscow during World War II, Hamrick meticulously takes aim at Philby's
reputation as a master spy. In reality, he argues, British intelligence was
aware of Philby's treachery well before two of Philby's associates fled Britain
in 1951, but elected to dupe the supposedly ingenious spy into acting as a pawn
in a British counterintelligence gambit to discover a broader Soviet spy
network.
Proving this thesis, however, is tricky. Unlike Dornon, Philby took pains to
cover his tracks. "No Czech sugar-beet harvesters or Polish pig farmers were
drawn from their fields or sties to the lane to watch him clatter heroically
past," as Hamrick points out. Any attempt to discredit Philby's myth -- and that
of the rest of the Cambridge Five: diplomat Donald Maclean, intelligence
officers Guy Burgess and John Cairncross and royal insider Anthony Blunt -- must
therefore pick through the meager evidence with a fine-toothed comb. Readers
with a tendency to skim might consider a heavy dose of Ritalin, or a stronger
amphetamine, to get through certain sections of Hamrick's book, particularly the
passages on the 12 cables sent from the United States to Moscow in 1944 and 1945
that refer to a well-placed British spy with the codename Homer.
As it turns out, Homer was actually the alias of Philby's partner Maclean,
and it is on Maclean that much of Hamrick's argument rests. According to
official reports, the British found out that Maclean was a Soviet spy only in
April 1951, one month before Maclean and Burgess escaped England on a midnight
boat to France and were shuttled to Moscow by Soviet secret service agents.
Hamrick conjectures that British intelligence agents, thanks to the work of
their own cryptographers, could have discovered that Maclean was working for the
Soviets as early as the summer of 1948 -- and then let him and his fellow spies
continue their work without informing their U.S. intelligence counterparts.
The motives that Hamrick offers as to why British secret agents might have
kept such information from the United States, despite a signed agreement on
intelligence exchange, are plausible enough. At the time, Britain was
cooperating with the United States on the development of nuclear weapons
technology and would doubtless not have wanted U.S. officials to know that
Maclean, who had been given considerable access to documents related to the
Manhattan Project during his stint at the British Embassy in Washington from
1944 to 1948, had passed on top-secret information to the Soviets.
"It is reasonable to assume that rather than fatally compromise the far more
important negotiations with Washington on the exchange of nuclear weapons
information vital to Britain's plans for a nuclear deterrent -- and those
prospects were promising -- Maclean would have been quietly moved to another
post after the end of his Washington assignment in September while London
silently considered its problem and pondered an equally silent resolution,"
Hamrick rationalizes.
Another reason why British intelligence might have allowed Maclean to
continue operating as a double agent, Hamrick suggests, would have been to use
his and his partners' betrayal to feed disinformation back to the Soviets.
Hamrick even pinpoints the man who would have organized such an operation -- the
wily Dick White, who led the Homer investigation from 1949 to 1951 as chief of
MI5 counterintelligence, and in 1956 became head of MI6.
Citing a cryptic, somewhat dubiously sourced passage from former MI6 employee
Hugh Trevor-Roper's short 1968 book on Philby, Hamrick states that White had
suspected Philby of espionage since 1945, when would-be Soviet secret service
defector Konstantin Volkov was nabbed by his own agency in Istanbul in a case
assigned to Philby, and brought back to Moscow to be shot at the Lubyanka.
White, Hamrick alleges, kept Maclean's outing quiet in order to organize an
elaborate counterintelligence operation, by which Maclean would be recalled to
London to head up the American Department at the Foreign Office in London,
Burgess dispatched to Washington and Philby deliberately fed disinformation.
However enthusiastic, Hamrick's case for Philby being Dick White's dupe is
not entirely convincing, based as it is on a string of speculations. Central to
his argument is an offhand comment made in 1976 by General Edwin L. Sibert, an
"experienced and respected U.S. army intelligence officer," to writer Anthony
Cave Brown, who later included it in two books about British intelligence
operations. According to Cave Brown, Sibert said that Philby had been used in
Washington "to pass fictitious information about the effectiveness of the
Strategic Air Command and the size of the U.S. atomic arsenal at the time of the
Korean War."
True? Hamrick seems to think so, noting that Sibert's "background alone makes
his comment worth serious consideration." He also draws attention to -- though
never really follows up on -- the suspicious circumstances that allowed Maclean,
Burgess and Philby to escape without ever being brought to justice back home,
and to Britain's refusal to this day to admit and declassify information on its
prior knowledge of Maclean's spy work.
But even if we accept the theory that Philby was turned into Dick White's
tool, Hamrick fails to take it that crucial step further -- to explain how the
revelation of a counterintelligence operation that likely produced few if any
tangible results impacts our knowledge of Cold War history. It never becomes
clear what Hamrick wants to establish beyond the clarification of some
historical details, and in the end we are left with little more than the
author's disgust at the philandering, drunken Philby, whose legend as a master
spy certainly owed as much to fiction as it did to fact.
Hamrick convincingly debunks the myth of Philby's audacious penetration of
the CIA by methodically highlighting the impossibility of his supposedly
immediate access to some of its most sensitive secrets. And he does a good job
of downplaying the usefulness of the information that Philby might have obtained
even if he had infiltrated the agency, pointing out that "an effective CIA
colossus" did not yet exist in 1949 and 1950.
One gets the impression, however, that Hamrick is resigned to the fact that,
no matter how well founded his theories may be, Philby's legend and notoriety
are unlikely to crumble. As he himself acknowledges at the outset, "Celebrity's
name is all we know and all we remember."
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