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The Cicero Spy Affair: German Access to British Secrets in World War II
 
 
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The Cicero Spy Affair: German Access to British Secrets in World War II [Paperback]

Richard Wires (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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Book Description

June 1, 2009

“Richard Wires takes us to the heart of the Cicero Affair.”—David Kahn, author of The Codebreakers

The valet of the British ambassador to Ankara in 1943 was an enterprising young man who understood he could steal and photograph vitally important documents of great interest to the Nazi war machine. The spy story became immensely popular with the film Five Fingers starring James Mason. Author Richard Wires has written the definitive account of the Cicero case and placed it in its proper historical context in neutral Turkey at the turning point of World War II. Intrigue, mystery, and greed form the background to the classic account of a famous spy case.


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Editorial Reviews

From Library Journal

Wartime spying is one of the most intriguing areas in the historiography of World War II, and Wires (emeritus, history, Ball State Univ.) has given us the best account yet of the remarkable espionage career of Elyesa Bazna, a valet who in 1943-44 microfilmed dozens of top-secret papers belonging to the unsuspecting British Ambassador to Turkey, Sir Hughe Knatchbull-Hugessen. Bazna, whose code name was Cicero, sold the film to the Germans for an estimated $1.2 million. Unfortunately for Bazna, however, the Germans paid him in counterfeit British notes, and he ended up with very little for his efforts. Wires explains in careful detail how Bazna developed his contacts within the German government and how interdepartmental competition fostered German skepticism of the informationAwhich, for the most part, they eventually ignored. This is a great tale, all the more so because it is true. Recommended for general collections and those strong in World War II studies.AEdward Goedeken, Iowa State Univ. Lib., Ames
Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

From Kirkus Reviews

A thrilling plunge into the world of the legendary WWII spy code-named ``Cicero,'' a shadowy figure whose mysteries have challenged the best efforts of expert intelligence officers, historians, and journalists. Wires (Emeritus, Ball State Univ.), who served with the Counter-Intelligence Corps in southern Germany, corrects discrepancies in previous accounts and fictionalizations (e.g., the 1952 film Five Fingers) of the Cicero affair. Neutral Turkey was a center of intrigue and espionage caught between three giant powers, Hitler's Germany, Stalin's Soviet Union, and the western Allies during the fateful years 1943-44. The British Ambassador to Turkey, following Churchill's strategy, tried to seduce the Turks into entering the war in order to mount a massive, coordinated attack against Hitler's eastern flank, but the nervous Turks feared being overrun by the two great dictator-led armies. The British diplomat, Sir Hughe Knatchbull-Hugessen, had the careless habit of bringing home top-secret documents from the embassy in Ankara for study. His trusted valet, Elyess Bazna, a former convict, had the run of the house when Sir Hughe was not home. The valet made duplicate keys and photographed documents, selling the films to a high German official. Wires supplements this oft-told story with other adventures and other questions: Did the spy got away, or was he caught? How did the skeptical German high command, thinking the spy data was a British deception, plan for D-Day after noting the word ``Overlord,'' code for the Allied invasion of Normandy during the critical winter of 1943-44? The Cicero operation, often called the most successful spying episode of WWII, helped the Germans gain insights on British proposals for Turkey and plans for winning the war. A great true spy adventure full of dramatic suspense. Wires has done exhaustive research in discovering what is known today, despite the web of lies and false clues of a master spy operating in the guise of a faithful servant. -- Copyright ©1999, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 300 pages
  • Publisher: Enigma Books; First Paperback Edition edition (June 1, 2009)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1929631804
  • ISBN-13: 978-1929631803
  • Product Dimensions: 8.9 x 6 x 0.6 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 12.8 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,856,055 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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17 of 21 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Lessons from Deception: The Turkish Spy Case, May 25, 2000
This is not a neutral, unbiased review. Even before finishing The Cicero Spy Affair: German Access to British Secrets in World War II, I'd bought second and third copies to forward to author and scholar par excellence Richard Wires for autographing and forwarding to relatives as gifts. How many other reviews posted on this website -- or any other, for that matter -- are based on a copy of the subject volume autographed by the author at his home? I bet very few. This review is an appreciation, really. If you like the numerous excerpts I've included below, you will have to get the book to get more, as this is only a sampling.

I met Dr. Wires at Ball State University in 1975, when I was a European history major working for him as a student assistant when he was chairman of the history department. Four years later, he supervised my senior thesis in European intellectual history on Nietzscke, Malraux and Jaspers. Over the last twenty years, we've stayed in touch though postcards during travels, home visits, phone calls and letters. He is a quintessential intellectual whose history of the most remarkable spy episode during WW II, if not ever, warrants only one - and even that is tongue-in-cheek - criticism: stylistic inconsistency. Specifically, the book is only elegantly written where it is not eloquent. A typical passages of the latter characteristic are:

"In the extensive literature about espionage affairs and intelligence activities during World War II the episode known as Operation "Cicero" has gained prominence and popularity, because of its remarkable character and ironies. For more than four months during the winter of 1943-1944 the valet of Britain's ambassador in neutral Turkey photographed secret papers that his employer failed to safeguard properly; by selling his undeveloped films to a representative of German intelligence in Ankara for a reported total of $1.2 million the servant became history's then most highly paid spy. The access to one of its opponents' most important embassies marked Germany's outstanding achievement in an otherwise poor record of secret service work. But little came of the success. Many of the documents were extremely valuable, but the dictatorship never used the information effectively; the enterprising spy escaped being caught but soon discovered that his money was mostly counterfeit."

The prominence and popularity of the literature about Elyesa Bagna, a Turkish kavass, or valet, who brazenly photographed secret papers of Britain's ambassador to neutral Turkey and sold the rolls of film to a handler at the German embassy for $1.2 million in what mostly turned out to be bogus pounds during the height of WW II is extraordinary and "has become a staple of intelligence lore." Fortunately, the Germans made little effective use of their intelligence lodestar, owing to the intrinsic rivalries, conflicts and jealousies of Nazi totalitarianism, a maze of party, military and career figures, including ambassador and one-time Weimar chancellor Franz von Papen, one of the nearly-purged non-Nazis outmaneuvered at the onset of Hitler's takeover of Germany's interwar democratic attempt in 1933. Cicero even inspired a 1952 movie, Five Fingers, portrayed as a documentary that falsely shows German knowledge of D-Day (in truth, the Germans only learned the word "Overlord," meaning little more than a second Allied front against some target in the northwest part of so-called "Fortress Europe," i.e., the German occupied nations of the continent).

The legacy of the affair is in the lessons learned and the embarrassment of the British reluctantly coming to terms with the scope of the compromises even today, as demonstrated by the sluggish sales of The Cicero Spy Affair in the U.K. In the U.S., however, some stores have sold out their initial stock and each speaking engagement by the author generates further opportunities for spoken history telling, one of the highest praises a historian can receive.

Nearly twenty five years ago, a college history professor sitting next to me at a formal lecture by Dr. Wires said he was the only person he'd ever met who could write a speech, read it verbatim as an oration, and hold the audience's rapt attention as he infused us with knowledge, insight and expansion of whatever we knew, or thought we knew, to newer, higher levels. This reader genuinely "heard" the author on every page of The Cicero Spy Affair.

Writing accurate history requires meeting an exacting standard; Dr. Wires has exceeded it, though. Chief Justice Rehnquist demonstrated the difficulties in meeting this standard when he recently said that, if you think you know a subject, write a book on it and read the reviews. The Chief Justice's referenced book mentioned the dates of admission to the union of Ohio, Indiana and Illinois, all wrong! He also referenced a Confederate who kept fighting after Appomattox who, in truth, fell at Shiloh three years earlier. The comment by the Chief Justice, who is certainly not mistake-prone but, rather, is blessed with a wry, dry sense of humor, illustrates the demanding standard of the historian's blend of craft, science and art. Even the most accomplished researcher can still err, but The Cicero Spy Affair appears, by all accounts, to be definitive.

Still not convinced you should read it? Your loss. Say you're not a twentieth century history, military intelligence specialist, read it anyway. Read it for its comprehensive research, documentation, analysis and explanations, and accompanying insightful photographs. Its passages on the vacillations and evasions of Europe's key neutral country, in light of Allied, Nazi and Soviet influences, the (thankfully) inefficient competitiveness of the German intelligence offices and the ineptitude of British security as a result of sleeping pills, piano playing and extremely careless handling of very secret writings all will amaze, enrich, entertain and astonish you. Read it.

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Cicero or Maxwell Smart?, March 8, 2007
By 
Pit O'Maley "Moon Man" (Alameda, Ca United States) - See all my reviews
Richar Wires does himself most admirably here,in placing 'Cicero' in a wider focus, enlarging one's knowledge of WWII espionage significantly.As much as I enjoyed "The Cicero Affair" and "Five Fingers," to be without the depth and understanding of the principals in this spy episode is like viewing the Mona Lisa only on TV. The overall effect is to add brilliant color to a prized black-and-white photo. Not only are you left with a deeper understanding of wartime espionage but a respectful regard for the diplomatic corps at that period. Who could believe that an amateur servant, with the right impulse, and appropriate acting bravadoes, could upset several continents, and get his just desserts? Or did he? This was an engrossing read, a combination treasure-hunt for clues weighed against fact that is hard to put down. 50 years later the WWII victor, USA, chooses to believe the documents presented before Congress by its internal security watchdogs. Go figure.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
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First Sentence:
The Cicero affair has long held a prominent place in the espionage lore and literature of World War II. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
spy affair, bogus notes, counterfeiting scheme, courier plane, spy operation, counterfeit notes, spy films, embassy security, strategic deception
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Sir Hughe, Foreign Ministry, Foreign Office, World War, Soviet Union, Cave Brown, Five Fingers, Elyesa Bazna, Frau Jenke, High Command, National Archives, Operation Cicero, United States, Walter Schellenberg, Bank of England, Third Reich, Foreign Secretary Bevin, Frau Vermehren, Hans Nogly, Joachim von Ribbentrop, The Wiener Library
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