The Independent Saturday 28/6/97 p12
How a Soviet Mole united Tito and Churchill
By Colin Brown and John Crossland
[caption to photograph]
Winston Churchill: Turned support away from the Chetnik royalist leader,
Mihailovich
Secret reports on one of the most controversial British undercover
operations of the Second World War are to bc released on Monday, showing
that a Soviet spy may have been responsible for the British switching
support to Tito's forces in the former Yugoslavia.
The documents, including transcripts of secret wartime signals to London,
are being released by the Public Records Office. They will show evidence of
the role played by James Klugmann - the Soviet mole who converted the
British spy, Donald Maclean, to Communism - in switching British allegiance
from a Yugoslav royalist resistance leader called Mihailovich to Tito, at a
critical point in the Second World War.
By switching support to Tito's forces, the Special Operations Executive
(SOE) helped to force the German retreat, but it cost Mihailovich his life
- he was executed after the war as a collaborator - and ensured that the
former Yugoslavia remained a Communist state under Tito's control.
[caption to photograph]
Balkan fighters: Fitzroy Maclean (above) and Julian Amery (below)
SOE spies who fought in the Balkans included the former Tory MP Julian
Amery. Other famous names who flit in and out of the tales of SOE derringdo
and duplicity in the region included Paddy Leigh Fermor and Major Anthony
Quayle, the screen actor.
Rupert Allason, author of spy books under the pen name Nigel West, and a
former Tory MP, said the real issue raised by the papers was the reason for
the British government's backing of Tito. Nothing had been known about Tito
- Fitzroy Maclean, a British agent, thought he was a woman - and the
government became convinced that Mihailovich was a collaborator with the
Germans - something the "Ultra" code intercepts showed to be untrue.
The signals sent by Klugmann, who was an intimate of the traitors Blunt,
Philby and Burgess at Cambridge, will for the first time confirm the claim
of an agent, quoted by Andrew Boyle in The Climate Of Treason, that
Klugmann was principally responsible for the massive wartime sabotage of
the Mihailovich supply operation and for keeping from London information
about the impressive activities of the Mihailovich forces in the fight
against the Germans.
They will be of particular interest to a decoder at Bletchley Park, nerve
centre of the government's radio intelligence war, who, while preserving
the anonymity of her wartime role, gave additional weight to the theory of
Klugmann's secret agenda. "I was in section 3L at GCHQ Bletchley Park with
the job of preparing a weekly summary of the Yugoslav situation for
Churchill. At the time I wasn't particularly suspicious that our
information didn't seem to be acted upon, but have become so since. I now
wonder if many of our reports were sent to the section where people like
Philby were working," she said.
"Certainly Klugmann seems to have played a more important role than was
thought. Two former Communist wartime agents assured me that he did, but
they didn't elaborate," she added.
The files, 969 in all, cover the operations of the SOE in Greece,
Yugoslavia, Bulgaria and Romania, which, with the exception of France, was
the most controversial theatre of the sabotage operation launched by
Churchill "to set [occupied] Europe ablaze".
Unfortunately the blaze all too frequently singed SOE operatives themselves
as they were caught up in internal politics particularly in Greece and
Yugoslavia. While fighting the German and Italian invaders, the Yugoslavs
were simultaneously locked in combat with each other. Special Operations
Executive (Balkans) operated from Cairo, and was ordered to carry out the
policies of Churchill's government, which initially supported Mihailovich's
royalist Chetnik forces.
The signals sent to SOE HQ in Baker Street, London, and to Churchill's
Cabinet, were based in part on intelligence gleaned from German Ultra code
traffic, filtered through Bletchley Park and passed to the only person in
SOE Cairo authorised to receive it, Colonel C M (Bolo) Keble.
A further opportunity for slanting the information from Yugoslavia was
provided by the influence exerted by John Cairncross, subsequently also
unmasked as a Russian agent and named as the Fifth Man, recruited from the
same Cambridge background, who in 1943 was working with the Yugoslav
section of GCHQ at Bletchley Park.
The concerted efforts of the Cairo office eventually bore fruit when the
British government dropped its support for Mihailovich. The Kew files are
redolent of the suspicion and duplicity which blighted relations between
SOE Cairo and its Foreign Office masters and which threatened to tear the
intelligence communtlty in the Balkans apart.
There is evidence of a power struggle which developed over the role of
Brigadier Sir Fitzroy Maclean, who was parachuted in as Churchill's
personal representative and came to exercise a powerful influence with
Tito.
Two months later, Bill Deakin, later Colonel Sir William Deakin, Senior
Intelligence Officer in Yugoslavia, rated Klugmann "indispensable ... and
giving invaluable service." The file reveals that it was known that
Klugmann had used his position to advance Tito's cause.
[In-text headline]
'Why did the Government back Tito? Nothing was known about him and they
actually thought he was a woman'