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Secret Agent 666: Aleister Crowley, British Intelligence and the Occult (Paperback)

~ Richard B. Spence (Author)
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)

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Product Description

Aleister Crowley is best known today as a founding father of modern occultism. His wide, hypnotic eyes peer at us from the cover of The Beatles' Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band, and his influence can be found everywhere in popular culture.

Crowley, also known as the Great Beast, has been the subject of several biographies, some painting him as a misunderstood genius, others as a manipulative charlatan. None of them have looked seriously at his career as an agent of British Intelligence.

Using documents gleaned from British, American, French, and Italian archives, Secret Agent 666 sensationally reveals that Crowley played a major role in the sinking of the Lusitania, a plot to overthrow the government of Spain, the thwarting of Irish and Indian nationalist conspiracies, and the 1941 flight of Rudolf Hess.

Author Richard B. Spence argues that Crowley-in his own unconventional way-was a patriotic Englishman who endured years of public vilification in part to mask his role as a secret agent.

The verification of the Great Beast's participation in the twentieth century's most astounding government plots will likely blow the minds of history buff s and occult aficionados alike.

Author Richard B. Spence can be seen on various documentaries on the History Channel and is a consultant for Washington, DC's International Spy Museum. He is also the author of Trust No One: The Secret World of Sidney Reilly (Feral House).


Product Details

  • Paperback: 380 pages
  • Publisher: Feral House (June 1, 2008)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1932595333
  • ISBN-13: 978-1932595338
  • Product Dimensions: 8.9 x 6 x 0.7 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 15.2 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #297,237 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

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    #64 in  Books > Biographies & Memoirs > Arts & Literature > New Age

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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Could Not Put It Down!, September 2, 2008
What a ride! The book takes you throught the life of Aleister Crowley, from early years to death and his connections with MI5 and MI6. Seemingly he was an agent of the Crown for his entire life. A laundry list of names are provided and each chapter is followed up with lists of references and footnotes.Check this out if you like Crowley and or real spy stuff!
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15 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Amply referenced, commendable research, July 15, 2008
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culled from disparate sources of Anglo-American gov. files, obscure books and articles in various languages (English, French, Russian, Italian, German). Despite obvious double-dealings in intel related issues, throughout the book the author emphasizes Aleister Crowley's unwavering patriotism and subservience to the Crown as apparent from the horse's mouth, the Beast's heavily-edited "Confessions" quoted on page 10: "I still think the English pot as black as the German kettle, and I am still willing to die in defense of that pot. Mine is the loyalty of Bill Syke's dog ... the fact that he starves me and beats me doesn't alter the fact that I am his dog, and I love him."
In all likelihood (chapter 1) his first brush with the Admirality's Naval Intelligence Division (NID), or with its previous incarnation, came while at Trinity College in Cambridge, which led to his first travel to Tsarist Russia in 1897, an assignment to infiltrate neo-Jacobites and the Golden Dawn society (HOGD), and tangential involvement in a failed coup attempt in Spain (1899). It was also during this time that on the advice of A.E. Waite "he did latch onto Karl von Eckartshausen's {who studied at the Jesuit University of Ingolstadt under the infamous Adam Weishaupt} allegorical work as further evidence of a Secret Church and a "hidden community of saints" guided by mysterious, illuminated adepts." (p. 22)
The early-1900s (ch. 2) find A.C. mountaineering in the Himalayas, reconnoitering French clout and role in the opium trade while on a field trip in Yunnan, and paying a second visit to Russia as director of a dance troupe billed 'Ragged Rag-Time Girls'. In the same era he also began experimenting with peyote/mescaline during his Mexican sojourn whose primary objective was to gather info on the local state of affairs in the oil business. Later on "{t}he Beast routinely administered mescaline and other drugs {for instance, at his version of the Rites of Eleusis) to willing and unsuspecting subjects (spicy curries were a favourite means) methodically cataloging the results." (p. 108) The outcome entitled "Liber CMXXXIV, The Cactus" disappeared after WWI -- for on whose desk the said journals might have landed, thumb to p. 234. Crowley's first encounter with the founder of Ordo Templi Orientis (OTO), Thedor Reuss in 1910, and through him with the Kaiser's intelligence apparatus and initiation into that fraternity 2 years later in Berlin, "occured soon after a major reorganization of British intelligence specifically designed to counter growing German menace." (p. 42)
The bulk of the present study (ch. 3-10) investigates the Beast's exploits in the U.S. (31 October, 1914 - mid-December, 1919) that included feeding disinfo under the guise of pro-German propagandist in the columns of such weekly newspapers as "The Fatherland", spying on Indian seditionists and militant Irish republicans, thwarting German-inspired sabotage and subversion on the West Coast (p. 102), rubbing elbows with anarchists like Emma Goldman and her lover and comrade-in-arms Alexander Berkman, etc.; all the while the Mage's seasonal magickal retreats could serve as cover for surveillance missions. The author takes no sides as to the veracity of contradicting scenarios surrounding the sinking of Lusitania, only notes that "a contributing factor to the loss of the cruisers was a common engineering failure -- longitudinal bulkheads that allowed water to flood the length of the ship. The coal stored there made sealing them quickly impossible." (p. 85) As for Crowley's role in the matter he says the Beast "boasted of having "proved that the Lusitania was a man-of-war" in a piece for The Fatherland published after the sinking." (p. 82) His key contacts among the Germans were George Sylvester Viereck (himself a possible multiple agent) and writer, occultist Hans Heinz Ewers. Fascination with black arts and homosexuality constituted a common denominator for all three. "The occult angle might explain why the Germans have found this phony Irishman and affected fruitcake credible." (p. ?) Further below, however, we read: "For the Germans, as for the British, the crucial question about Crowley was not whether he could be trusted, but whether he could be useful." (p. 206)
Besides putting his doctrines into practice at the Abbey of Thelema, the years spent in Sicily - while commuting between Italy, France, England - afforded uncle Crowley the opportunity to keep a tab on French and Italian naval movements concerning Tunisia and Syria at the behest of his 'beloved' country. As a curious episode, circumstantial speculation indicates A.C. may have been instrumental in the foiled assassination attempt on Mussolini in 1927. "{I}t seems possible that {Theosophist Violet} Gibson was acting on post-hypnotic suggestion, and Crowley, in league with {Giovanni A. Colonna, Duca di} Cesaro may have had a hand in preparing her." (p. 189) Back in England, he reunited with a handful of acquaintances he had met in America, including Jewish financier Otto Kahn, who replaced fellow Jew Jacob Schiff after the latter's death at the helm of Kuhn, Loeb and Co., Secret Intelligence Service (SIS) man William Wiseman, and Jack-of-all-trades Sidney Reilly (Sigmund Rosenblum). "{T}he suspicion was that Reilly and Wiseman, as agents for New York bankers, were working against British interest, perhaps channeling money to cash-hungry Soviets and bankrolling political unrest from India to Italy. Was Kahn eyeing the Beast for some part in this, or was the "reform element" {in British intel} using Crowley to probe the Kahn-Wiseman circle?" (p. 186) This links up with another long-time Crowley 'friend' and controller Everard Feilding, who "worked closely with NILI spy ring of Zionist Jews working for Britain against the Turks. The NILI group had political allies and financial connections to the same Zionist circles in New York that were working closely with Wiseman and Section V." (p. 144) In fact, as master trickster the Mage had special knack for touting his own brand of magick, Thelema as a commodity for sale to various genocidal movements/regimes. Not long after the victory of the Bolshevik revolution in Russia, in a letter to Trotsky (Lev Bronstein) the Beast offered his "help in ridding the Earth of the scourge of Christianity {...} Everything in Crowley's modus operandi suggests his display of radical sympathies was a new twist on his old game: agent provocateur." (pp. 148-9, see also p. 195) He even painted a picture dubbed 'Young Bolshevik Girl with a Wart Looking at Trotsky' (p. 165). Given Thelema's ties to Qabalah, no wonder that "in 1922 he proposed a convenient means for Jews to regain their true will and destiny -- the adoption of Thelema as the foundation of new Israel." (p. 166) As for the Nazis, "around the same time Crowley was reaching out to Hitler {"in a 1933 article for the Sunday Dispatch" where he had asserted that "before Hitler was, I am"}, he also was courting Joseph Stalin" via his admirer and disciple, journalist Walter Duranty, perhaps with the aim to neutralize the Red Menace (pp. 212-3). There is no evidence that any of the recipients took the bait.
The rest of the book (ch. 13-4) focuses, among other things, on Crowley's connections to people of importance in the Weimar republic and the Third Reich. Chief among them were Karl Germer of OTO, General Erich Ludendorff, old pals like Kurt Jahnke and George Viereck. Jahnke worked under Deputy Führer and Hitler's fraternal lover Rudolf Hess in a special intelligence bureau called 'Abteilung Pfeffer', whose mission was "the strengthening of Anglo-German relations by a mutual, unfettered exchange of views." (p. 245) Or preparing the ground for WWII? After the slaughterhouse went operational in 1939, at the British end we find Crowley being an advisor to a group that targeted propaganda to lure Hess into Britain and which gravitated around Admiral John Godfrey of NID, Ian Fleming (case officer assigned to the Beast), Dennis Wheatley, and astrologer Louis de Wohl. Outlandish as may seem, Richard Spence doesn't discard the notion out of hand that A.C. had somehow (through pyscho-mystical-ritualistic means rather than some early form of EMF gadgetry, we ask) 'implanted' a dream in Hess's mind where the fellow found himself in Buckingham Palace received by the King (pp. 247-8). Hmm. Nor is the author dismissive about the idea the ageing Mage could interrogate the captured occultist Deputy Führer (or his body-double, we might add), utilizing his battle-tested psychotropic armamentarium. Be as it may, for further details and scores of topics left untouched in this modest review, buy a copy or two!

P.S. Have y'all read the musing that came out on April's Fool's Day 2006 and the concomitant brainstorming available on the net concerning the plausibility of the Beast having fathered Barbara Bush?
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars What Didn't This Guy Do?, October 18, 2009
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First of all, I had no idea Aleister Crowley did anything more than create a popular deck of tarot cards. Whew! I had no idea that was so far down the list with this guy.

The writing style makes this book more like a textbook. Sometimes it is hard keeping track of all the characters introduced into the mix. Although it is dry, it is still well written, and the author did a lot of research to come up with all the information and references to corroborate events.

There are just too many coincidences and strange occurrences to deny that Crowley was in some manner involved with British Intelligence. What is more interesting is the people who crossed his path. The people who are connected to AC or his occult organization reads like a "lifestyles of the rich and famous" for that period...Aldous Huxley, Ian Fleming, L Ron Hubbard, etc.

The book also shows the connections between all the intelligence communities and the Freemasons and other mystery schools of the occult. With all the Freemasons in positions of worldwide power and politics, it would seem to be a perfect cover for passing confidential information among spies.

Definitely worth reading.
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3.0 out of 5 stars What research doesn't find
I quite enjoyed this book. In a world where we are six degrees separate from anybody else, it seems that Aleister Crowley had first and second hand experience of pretty well... Read more
Published 12 months ago by Henry Pierce

5.0 out of 5 stars agree with the rest..
this particular book is full of facts and backed by evidence. the man does his research!!
Published 14 months ago by D. Call

5.0 out of 5 stars A one-of-a-kind portrait, and worthy inclusion to shelves chronicling the history of occult practices
Enhanced with a handful of black-and-white photographs, Secret Agent 666: Aleister Crowley, British Intelligence and the Occult is a biography of Aleister Crowley, the founding... Read more
Published 17 months ago by Midwest Book Review

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