Difference between revisions of "Guy Liddell"
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In 1933, Liddell accompanied [[Frank Foley]], the Berlin station chief of [[MI6]], on a liaison visit to Nazi Germany.<ref>Francis Stonor Saunders, [http://www.lrb.co.uk/v37/n07/frances-stonorsaunders/stuck-on-the-flypaper Stuck on the Flypaper], ''London Review of Books'', 9 April 2015.</ref> | In 1933, Liddell accompanied [[Frank Foley]], the Berlin station chief of [[MI6]], on a liaison visit to Nazi Germany.<ref>Francis Stonor Saunders, [http://www.lrb.co.uk/v37/n07/frances-stonorsaunders/stuck-on-the-flypaper Stuck on the Flypaper], ''London Review of Books'', 9 April 2015.</ref> | ||
− | John Costello's 1988 ''Mask of Treachery'' speculated that Liddell was the so-called Fifth Man, in a Soviet Spy Ring, later named by [[Christopher Andrew]] and [[Oleg Gordievsky]] as [[John Cairncross]].<ref>David Wise, Molehunt: How the Search for a Phantom Traitor Shattered the CIA, Avon Books, 1992, p. | + | John Costello's 1988 ''Mask of Treachery'' speculated that Liddell was the so-called Fifth Man, in a Soviet Spy Ring, later named by [[Christopher Andrew]] and [[Oleg Gordievsky]] as [[John Cairncross]].<ref>David Wise, Molehunt: How the Search for a Phantom Traitor Shattered the CIA, Avon Books, 1992, p.112.</ref> |
==External resources== | ==External resources== |
Revision as of 22:51, 10 April 2015
Guy Liddell was a senior MI5 officer.
In 1933, Liddell accompanied Frank Foley, the Berlin station chief of MI6, on a liaison visit to Nazi Germany.[1]
John Costello's 1988 Mask of Treachery speculated that Liddell was the so-called Fifth Man, in a Soviet Spy Ring, later named by Christopher Andrew and Oleg Gordievsky as John Cairncross.[2]
External resources
- NameBase LIDDELL GUY MAYNARD
Notes
- ↑ Francis Stonor Saunders, Stuck on the Flypaper, London Review of Books, 9 April 2015.
- ↑ David Wise, Molehunt: How the Search for a Phantom Traitor Shattered the CIA, Avon Books, 1992, p.112.