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The Secret History of MI6 - Keith Jeffery [488]

By Root 2549 0
with:

pre-First World War

First World War

interwar

Second World War

postwar

War Office Liaison Group (SIS)

War Trade Intelligence Department

Warsaw:

British embassy

Passport Control Office

SIS station

White Russian networks

Washington, D.C.:

BSC office

MI5 office

SIS station

Watson, General Edwin M., secretary to Roosevelt

Wavell, General Archibald (later 1st Earl Wavell)

Wedemeyer, General Albert C., chief of staff to Chiang Kai-shek

Wedgwood, Josiah (later 1st Baron

Wedgwood)

Weihaiwei (Weihei)

Weimerskirch sisters

Weizmann, Chaim

Welsh, Eric

Wenchow (Wenzhou), SIS station

Westmacott, Guy

Whaddon Hall, Buckinghamshire

White, (Sir) Dick (Director-General MI5))

White Russians

intelligence networks

White’s Club

Whittall, Arthur

Whittall, Edwin

Whitwell, John (pseud.) see Nicholson, Leslie

Wiedersheim (German general)

Wilhelm II, Kaiser

Wilhelmina, Queen of the Netherlands

Wilhelmshaven

Wilkinson, Gerald

Willert, (Sir) Arthur

Williams, Brigadier (Sir) Edgar ‘Bill’, 21st Army Group intelligence chief

Williams, Orlo (House of Commons clerk), review of Maugham’s Ashenden

Williams, Valentine (journalist and thriller-writer)

Willoughby, General Charles (US Chief of Intelligence)

Wilson, Field Marshal Sir Henry (DMO 1910-14):

appointed DMO

with British Expeditionary Force

prewar intelligence gathering

promotes Anglo-French relations

proposes salary increases for Cumming and Kell

replaced as DMO by Callwell

support for Cumming

views on:

Agadir Crisis

prewar German invasion threat

threat of Bolshevism

visits Russia with Milner Mission

Wilson, Sir Horace (Treasury Permanent Secretary)

Wilson, Woodrow

Winter War (Soviet Union-Finland 1939-40)

Winterbotham, Frederick

wireless communications technology

Wiseman, Sir William

women, SIS recruitment of

Woollcombe, Malcolm:

head of SIS Political Section

recruited to SIS

report annotated by Chamberlain

retirement

role in appointment of Menzies as Chief

role in Zinoviev Letter affair

‘What should we do?’ policy paper on Munich Crisis

Workers Weekly

World Warsee First World War

World WarII see Second World War

Worthington, Frank V., Deputy Chief Censor

Worthington-Evans, Sir Laming, Secretary of State for War

Wright, Peter (incompetent spy)

WURL (radio station)

Wylie, Captain (Chief of Intelligence Staff, Far East Combined Bureau)


XX (Twenty) Committee (co-ordination of double-agents)

XXX Committee

XXXX Committee


Y Committee (co-ordination of signals intelligence)

Yeh, George (Nationalist Chinese intelligence officer)

Yeo-Thomas, Wing Commander Forest ‘Tommy’

Yermaloff, General, Russian military attaché in London

Young, George

Yugoslavia:

Četniks

coup of March 1941

Nazi invasion

Partisans

SIS liaison with intelligence services

SIS operations:

Second World War

postwar

SOE operations

Tito regime

see also Belgrade


Z Organisation

Zabotin, Nikolai, Soviet military attaché in Ottawa

Zaghloul, Saad

Zagreb

Zeebrugge

Zhdanov, Andrei

Zhou Enlai

Zimmermann, Arthur

Zinoviev, Grigori

Zinoviev Letter (1924)

Zionism

Zurich

SIS station

Table of Contents

Title Page

Copyright Page

Foreword

Preface

Acknowledgements

PART ONE - EARLY DAYS

Chapter 1 - The beginnings of the Service

PART TWO - THE FIRST WORLD WAR

Chapter 2 - Status, organisation and expertise

Chapter 3 - Operations in the West

Chapter 4 - Working further afield

PART THREE - THE INTERWAR YEARS

Chapter 5 - The emergence of SIS

Chapter 6 - From Boche to Bolsheviks

Chapter 7 - Domestic matters

Chapter 8 - Existing on a shoestring

Chapter 9 - Approaching war

PART FOUR - THE IMPACT OF WAR

Chapter 10 - Keeping afloat

Chapter 11 - The European theatre

Chapter 12 - From Budapest to Baghdad

Chapter 13 - West and East

PART FIVE - WINNING THE WAR

Chapter 14 - The tide turns

Chapter 15 - From Switzerland to Normandy

Chapter 16 - Victory in Europe

Chapter 17 - Asia and the end of the war

Chapter 18 - Postwar planning

PART SIX - FROM HOT WAR TO COLD WAR

Chapter 19 - Adjusting to peace

Chapter 20 - Deployment and operations

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