The Secret History of MI6 - Keith Jeffery [482]
SIS station
Tinsley (‘T’) organisation
Rouen
Roy, M. N. (Indian Communist)
Royal Air Force see RAF
Royal Canadian Mounted Police
Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve
Royal Navy:
First World War campaigns
pre-First World War intelligence gathering
review of wartime secret service (1919)
see also Admiralty
Ruge, General Otto
Rumbold, Sir Horace
Rundstedt, Field Marshal Gert von
Rushbrooke, Vice-Admiral Edmund (DNI 1942-46)
Russell, E.H.
Russia, Tsarist:
Cumming’s establishment of agents in
prewar relations with Britain
relations between British embassy and SIS
Russian threat to British imperial possessions
SIS use of former Tsarist intelligence officers and agents
Triple Entente
wartime intelligence missions in
see also Soviet Union; White Russians
Russian Revolution (1917)
Rutland, Frederick Joseph (Japanese spy)
safes, techniques for opening
Said, Abdul Hamid
St Albans:
agent training centre
Sussex team HQ
wartime relocation of SIS departments to
St John’s College, Cambridge
St Petersburg see Petrograd
Salazar, António de Oliveira
Salonika
‘Salvage’ scheme (China 1949)
Samos
Samson, Rhys
Samsonov, General Alexander
San Francisco
Santiago
SIS station
Sardinia
Sargent, Sir Orme ‘Moley’, Foreign Office Deputy and later Permanent Under-Secretary
Saudi Arabia
Savinkov, Boris
Savoy Hotel (London)
Saw Ba U Gyi (Karen leader)
Scale, John Dymoke
Scandinavia see Denmark; Norway; Sweden
Scharnhorst (German battle cruiser)
Schellenberg, Walter (Nazi intelligence chief)
Schmidt, Hans-Thilo (‘Asché’)
Schober, Dr Johannes (head of Vienna police and founder of Interpol)
Schutzstaffel (Nazi security service; SS)
Adolf Hitler Division
Scientific Section (SIS)
Scotland Yard see Special Branch (Metropolitan Police)
scrambler telephones
SD see Sicherheitsdienst
Seal, (Sir) Eric (principal private secretary to Churchill)
Seattle
Second World War:
A Force (strategic deception operations)
awards and decorations for intelligence workers
Bittern I, Operation (Burma)
Blow, Operation (Burma)
Bulge, Operation (Burma)
coast-watching
economic intelligence
Epsilon, Operation (Norway)
intelligence and resistance networks and organisations:
Agir network (France)
Alliance/Kul organisation (France)
Aquarius network (Norway)
Auburn network (Corsica)
Confrérie de Notre-Dame network (France)
Darek (Polish) network (Switzerland)
Davis network (France)
‘Dick Jones’ network (Tunisia)
Dunderdale networks (France)
F2 (Polish) network (France)
Felix network (France)
Hendrick network (Netherlands)
Jade/Fitzroy organisation (France)
Johnny network (France)
Jove network (France)
Lubicz (Polish) network (France)
Luc network (Belgium)
Makir network (Norway)
Mounier network (Tunisia)
Nannygoat network (Romania)
Orange network (Algeria)
Service Clarence/Cleveland organisation (Belgium)
Skylark networks (Norway)
Sosie network (France)
Triboullet network (France)
intelligence and security bodies:
Africa Bureau
British Security Co-ordination (United States)
Combined Intelligence Section (GHQ, Home Forces)
Far East Combined Bureau (FECB)
MI9
MI14
Middle East Intelligence Centre
P Division (South East Asia)
Security Executive
Security Intelligence Far East (SIFE)
Security Intelligence Middle East (SIME)
XX (Twenty) Committee
XXX Committee
XXXX Committee
Inter-Services Liaison Departments (SIS; ISLD):
Far East
Middle East
Station A (Malaya)
Italy enters war
Japan enters war
Lend-Lease agreement
Long Range Desert Group (LRDG)
military headquarters:
Middle East (Cairo)
North Africa (Algiers)
South East Asia Command
Supreme Headquarters Allied Expeditionary Force (SHAEF)
military intelligence, SIS role
Mullet, Operation (Malaya)
outbreak of war
Overlord, Operation (Allied invasion of occupied France)
Phoney War
prisoners of war
SIS units:
No. 1 Intelligence Unit
No. 2 Intelligence (Unit) Section
Special Communications Units
Special Counter-Intelligence Units
Special Liaison Units
SOE operations see SOE
Soviet Union enters war
Sussex scheme (joint