Sinclair McKay

Through the eyes of spies

Max Hastings’s Secret War concludes that most secret agents aren’t effective; but Paddy Hayes finds a fantastic heroine in Daphne Park, Queen of Spies

Through the eyes of spies
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The Secret War

Max Hastings

Collins, pp. 558, £

Queen of Spies: Daphne Park, Britain’s Cold War Spy Master

Paddy Hayes

Duckworth, pp. 285, £

Spying is a branch of philosophy, although you would never guess it from that expression on Daniel Craig’s face. Its adepts interrogate the surface of reality — people, landscapes, texts — knowing that they will discover extraordinary hermetic meanings. They study fragments of documents, whispers of messages, and from these, they summon entire worlds. Possibly one of the reasons Max Hastings cannot pretend to be hugely impressed by the boasts of wartime spies is the philosophical nebulousness of what constitutes ‘results’ in secret-agent speak. Soldiers fight, shoulder to shoulder; battles are clearly lost and won. But those who work in the shadows — and in The Secret War, Hastings turns the spotlight on spies in every continent — are frequently ungovernable individualists whose efforts are more difficult to quantify.

Not that he has devoted 600 pages to being dismissive of every Special Operations Executive plot to set Europe ablaze, or code-breaking triumph, or brave infiltration, or double-agent deception. He writes of Hugh Trevor-Roper’s native cipher skill, of Soviet 007 Richard Sorge, and of unsung Bletchley boffins like Bill Tutte with proper and infectious relish. The brilliance of the D-Day Double Cross deception — making the Germans look the wrong way as Operation Overlord began — is duly acknowledged. But for every formidably brave spy providing ‘human intelligence’ by scouting out enemy territory and personnel, he also provides a magnificent parade of crooks, alcoholics and fantasists such as Ronald Seth (his codename: ‘Blunderhead’).

And the agents’ controllers are not beyond criticism. Hastings quotes the ninth Duke of Buccleuch, who was fag at Eton to Brigadier Stewart Menzies, wartime head of MI6. The Duke was mystified, he told a friend, ‘how so unbelievably stupid a man could have ended up in such a position’.

Yet it was under Menzies that the Bletchley codebreakers were allowed their free-range anarchy; and the barking civilians who brought divine inspiration were gathered together on one estate. Part of the reason their German counterparts flopped was that their geniuses were spread out among too many departments, subject to the vicious in-fighting of a vicious dictatorship. And their failure was as nothing to the Abwehr chief Admiral Canaris, who seems — in all his serial misreading of intelligence — to have been marginally less competent than Herr Flick from ’Allo ’Allo.

What makes a secret agent effective? The courageous exploits of Britain’s SOE — parachuting agents into Greece, Yugoslavia, Sicily — did not, Hastings concludes regretfully, make the gigantic impact that their excitable publicity suggested. Yet he shrewdly adds that their work in boosting morale was invaluable — and that was actually far more important.

He has drawn fascinating fresh material from Russian archives; the terrifying business of spying for Stalin is given a rich human depth. Even when Stalin received brilliantly accurate intelligence (for instance, clear indications in 1941 that the Germans were about to attack), his manic paranoia made him mistrustful and unwilling to act. Hastings has also delved deep into the US effort; the exhaustion of genius naval codebreakers in a basement called ‘the Dungeon’ who broke Japanese ciphers and foresaw the 1942 Battle of Midway. But elsewhere, the Americans were frighteningly lax about security; there was casual blabbing all over Washington. This is a book that pulses along, yet is filled with acute insight into human ingenuity, frailty, and the ironies of evil; the author points out that the German cipher-crackers might have done much better if — like the British — they had used the finest Jewish minds.

And then of course there is the unavoidable matter of the Cambridge spies; this was never a subject to get Daphne Park — the fantastic heroine of postwar MI6 — started on. This extraordinary figure — the daughter of a poor gold-rush family in Tanganyika — had no doubts that the core of the service was loyalty: creatures such as Philby and Burgess simply could not be understood. The intelligence historian Paddy Hayes traces Dame Daphne’s mind-boggling career, from tin-shack childhood, to Cambridge, to her efforts to pile in to the second world war, and then MI6; rising via postings to Moscow, the Congo and Vietnam at moments of maximum political tension to the senior MI6 position of Controller (Western Hemisphere) in the 1970s.

Dame Daphne’s charisma (she once described herself as a ‘cheerful fat missionary’) is plain throughout: facing mortal peril in Leopoldville in a Citroen 2CV, surrounded by homicidal militia men and armed only with whisky and a brilliantly deployed giggle; escaping Soviet agents by swimming across an icy Russian river in her underwear; and most remarkably, rising through a clandestine service ill-disposed towards women.

The book is simply not long enough; and Hayes is rather breathless. But like Sir Max, Dame Daphne’s story leaves us wondering about reality as seen through the eyes of a spy; and about how far spy work affected that reality.

'The Secret War', £30 and 'Queen of Spies: Daphne Park, Britain’s Cold War Spy Master', £20 are available from the Spectator Bookshop, Tel: 08430 600033. Sinclair McKay is the author of The Lost World of Bletchley Park and The Secret Listeners.