Chapter 18: The Brotherhood of Perverted Men
Chapter 19: The Exiles
Chapter 20: The Mole Hunts
Colonel Grace-Groundling-Marchpole
Robin Zaehner and Stuart Hampshire
Anthony Blunt and Andrew Boyle
Maurice Oldfield and Chapman Pincher
Picture Section
Notes
Index
Acknowledgements
About the Author
Also by Richard Davenport-Hines
About the Publisher
In MI5 files the symbol @ is used to indicate an alias, and repetitions of @ indicate a variety of aliases or codenames. I have followed this practice in the text.
– Sir Robert Vansittart, head of the Foreign Office. (Popperfoto/Getty Images)
– Cecil L’Estrange Malone, Leninist MP for Leyton East. (Associated Newspapers/REX/Shutterstock)
– Jack Hayes, the MP whose detective agency manned by aggrieved ex-policemen spied for Moscow. (© National Portrait Gallery, London)
– MI5’s agent M/1, Graham Pollard. (Esther Potter)
– MI5’s agent M/12, Olga Gray. (Valerie Lippay)
– Percy Glading, leader of the Woolwich Arsenal and Holland Road spy ring. (Keystone Pictures USA/Alamy Stock Photo)
– Wilfrid Vernon, the MP who filched aviation secrets for Stalinist Russia and spoke up for Maoist China. (Daily Mail/REX/Shutterstock)
– Maurice Dobb, Cambridge economist. (Peter Lofts)
– Anthony Blunt boating party on the River Ouse in 1930. (Lytton Strachey/Frances Partridge/Getty Images)
– Moscow’s talent scout Edith Tudor-Hart. (Attributed to Edith Tudor-Hart; print by Joanna Kane. Edith Tudor-Hart. National Galleries of Scotland / Archive presented by Wolfgang Suschitzky 2004. © Copyright held jointly by Peter Suschitzky, Julie Donat and Misha Donat)
– Pall Mall during the Blitz. (Central Press/Getty Images)
– Andrew Cohen, as Governor of Uganda, shares a dais with the Kabaka of Buganda. (Terence Spencer/The LIFE Images Collection/Getty Images)
– Philby’s early associate Peter Smolka. (Centropa)
– Alexander Foote, who spied for Soviet Russia before defecting to the British in Berlin and cooperating with MI5. (Popperfoto/Getty Images)
– Igor Gouzenko, the Russian cipher clerk who defected in 1945. (Bettmann/Getty Images)
– Donald Maclean perched on Jock Balfour’s desk at the Washington embassy, with Nicholas Henderson and Denis Greenhill. (Popperfoto/Getty Images)
– Special Branch’s Jim Skardon, prime interrogator of Soviet spies. (Associated Newspapers/REX/Shutterstock)
– Lord Inverchapel appreciating young American manhood. (Photo by JHU Sheridan Libraries/Gado/Getty Images)
– A carefree family without a secret in the world: Melinda and Donald Maclean. (Photo by Keystone-France/Gamma-Keystone via Getty Images)
– Dora Philby and her son in her Kensington flat. (Photo by Harold Clements/Express/Getty Images)
– Philby’s wife Aileen facing prying journalists at her front door. (Associated Newspapers/REX/Shutterstock)
– Alan Nunn May, after his release from prison, enjoys the consumer durables of the Affluent Society. (Keystone Pictures USA/Alamy Stock Photo)
– The exiled Guy Burgess. (Popperfoto/Getty Images)
– John Vassall. (Trinity Mirror/Mirrorpix/Alamy Stock Photo)
– George Blake. (Photo by Central Press/Hulton Archive/Getty Images)
– George Brown, Foreign Secretary. (Clive Limpkin/Associated Newspapers /REX/Shutterstock)
– Richard Crossman. (Photo by Len Trievnor/Daily Express/Getty Images)
– Daily Express journalist Sefton Delmer. (Photo by Ronald Dumont/Express/Getty Images)
– Maurice Oldfield of SIS – with his mother and sister outside Buckingham Palace. (©UPP/TopFoto)
In planning this book and arranging its evidence I have been guided by the social anthropologist Sir Edward Evans-Pritchard. ‘Events lose much, even all, of their meaning if they are not seen as having some degree of regularity and constancy, as belonging to a certain type of event, all instances of which have many features in common,’ he wrote. ‘King John’s struggle with the barons is meaningful only when the relations of the barons to Henry I, Stephen, Henry II, and Richard are also known; and also when the relations between the kings and barons in other countries with feudal institutions are known.’ Similarly, the intelligence