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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Stories Behind the Headlines, July 9, 2002
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This 1962 book has a Foreword by Ian Fleming ("James Bond is not in fact a hero, but an efficient and not very attractive blunt instrument in the hands of government ... a highly romanticized version of the true spy") who first met William Stephenson ("A Man Called Intrepid") when he was on a mission to Washington in 1941. Stephenson was sent to New York in 1940 to protect British shipping of war material (and to gather information on enemy activities for appropriate counter-measures), and to promote public opinion in favor of American intervention on the side of Britain. Any offensive actions would have to remain secret. This was part of Economic Warfare.

Chapter 2 documents the important political decisions made at the time by President Roosevelt and others in 1940. Fifty coal burning destroyers were sent to Britain at a critical time. The Sperry bomb-sight was leased after they learned the Germans had the plans. Chapter 3 tells of the propaganda campaign to discredit isolationists and Nazi supporters, and the methods used to cripple or harass German officials. Censorship of the mails was used to track down spies and saboteurs. Chapter 4 tells of the intrigues with the Vichy French government. The personal secretary of the Vichy ambassador was recruited into a business to gain knowledge of his affairs. This was used to discredit the Embassy. A British agent was placed in close contact with the Embassy to gain information from her male friends.

Chapter 5 tells of the Special Operations of economic warfare: to manufacture evidence of the facts believed to be true but which could not otherwise be proved! They had a laboratory to fabricate letters and other documents. The imprint of any typewrite on earth could be reproduced faultlessly. It tells how letters were created to condemn a Czech collaborator! Another game was to subject Fascist sympathizers to petty persecution to waste time in confusion, and get them into trouble. It tells how a forged letter was created to cause the cancellation of the Italian airline franchise, an important Axis channel of communication. Brazil then broke with the Axis. Chapter 6 tells of the OSS during WW2. Stephenson did everything to help Donovan get the position. The new organization faced two bureaucratic rivals: the FBI, and the military intelligence departments. It was mainly through the assistance of BSC that they survived. Intelligence and other trained experts were put at Donovan's disposal. It explains how a short-wave station in Boston was used to broadcast propaganda.

Chapter 7 repeats various anecdotes from the war. They used astrological predictions for propaganda! The techniques to use polling to control voting and win elections was written in 1943 by David Ogilvy. Since then the US Government has used these techniques both overtly and covertly. It tells how stories were given to principal journalists and feature writers, and how columnist Drew Pearson acquired information. Chapter 8 tells how President Roosevelt sent a message to Stephenson on November 27: "Japanese negotiations off. Services expect action within two weeks". How this happened is a matter of history. There is a discussion on the use and value of double agents. He tells of the training given to secret agents at Oshawa. Sabotage to French locomotives alone nearly equaled the number disabled by air action. The information from a Soviet code clerk in Canada exposed their spy system. The final tribute was that the BSC helped to reduce the number of American casualties.

Does this book show how a small group shapes and controls the events that affect our lives?

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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Room 3603, October 25, 2000
This was published in America as "Room 3603" in 1963, with a forword by Ian Fleming (who worked for the British Security Co-ordination); this was one of the first books on the British secret service with official blessing.

The head of this operation was Sir William Stephenson, the man whose code name was INTREPID. It tells of his efforts to neutralize and defeat the Nazis in South and North America, before America entered the war. After "A Man Called Intrepid" became a best-seller in 1976, it was republished. It provides more history than the few pages in the later book. There are many interesting stories in this book.

One of them is how they forged a typewritten document to create a political scandal. The document was on microfilm; this prevents authentication thru fingerprints, ink and paper composition, etc. A picture of a thing is not the thing.

Another is the use of created gossip, and other dirty tricks, to harass the opposition. Watergate was an example of this: Nixon's agents originally broke in to plant forged documents; they were caught when they broke in a second time to retrieve these false documents.

Perhaps the most important is "how to use polling techniques to predetermine elections", a method used by our federal government "both overtly and secretly". Details are lacking in this book because this was still classified information. But you can read more in the "Propaganda At Work" chapter.

The most revealing fact is how Sir William Stephenson used these efforts to gain commerce for his own business.

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Churchill's Left Hand Man, August 3, 2009
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This review is from: The Quiet Canadian: The Secret Service Story of Sir William Stephenson (Hardcover)
This is the story of Winston Churchill's most important representative in America before U.S.entry into WWII. With the utmost skill, the head of British Security Coordination (BSC) the BSC Head man, moved America into finnciLally aiding Great Britain, suppressing American Isolationism and all before December 7, 1941. After that date, he focused FDR on inventing the OSS in which GB and the USA cooperated in building the greatest intelligence organization of WWII, the predecessor of today's CIA and MI-6. After WWII, the OSS was disbanded and with the CIA it has been all downhill since.
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1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Good WWII Spy History, January 3, 2010
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This review is from: The Quiet Canadian: The Secret Service Story of Sir William Stephenson (Hardcover)
This is a good book about the work of the British and US secret work that went on years before the US got into WW II.
While the politicians and people of the US were saying that we should stay out if the war in Europe these people were keeping Germany in check.
A good history of what it took to defeat the Germans.

A better version of this story is the Book "A man called intrepid"
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