Read A Spy Among Friends Online

Authors: Ben Macintyre

A Spy Among Friends (62 page)

BOOK: A Spy Among Friends
4.8Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

 
‘overjoyed’: Modin,
My Five Cambridge Friends
, p. 234.

 
‘seek his reemployment’: Bower,
The Perfect English Spy
, p. 158.

 
‘further service to the Soviet cause’: Philby,
My Silent War
, p. 198.

 
‘frogmen had popped up’: Elliott,
My Little Eye
, p. 24.

 
‘a matter of high intelligence priority’: ibid.

 
‘We wanted a closer look’: ibid.

 
‘undaunted devotion to duty’: ibid.

 
‘a most engaging man’: ibid.

 
‘kindly bantam cock’: Rob Hoole, ‘The Buster Crabb Enigma’,
Warship World
, January 2007.

 
‘to get m’ feet wet again’: Marshall Pugh,
Commander Crabb
(London, 1956), p. 156.

 
‘supplies of whisky’: Elliott,
My Little Eye
, p. 25.

 
‘heading for a heart attack’: Wright,
Spycatcher
,
p. 74.

 
‘Crabb was still the most experienced’: Elliott,
My Little Eye
, p. 25.

 
‘The dicey operations’: Bower,
The Perfect English Spy
, p. 159.

 
‘These ships are our guests’: Pincher,
Treachery
, p. 417.

 
‘We don’t have a chain’: Bower,
The Perfect English Spy
, p. 160.

 
‘I am sorry, but we cannot’: Don Hale,
The Final Dive: The Life and Death of Buster Crabb
(London, 2007), p. 172.

 
‘operation was mounted’: Elliott,
My Little Eye
, p. 24.

 
‘working holiday’: Cave Brown,
Treason in the Blood
,
p. 460.

 
‘attached Foreign Office’: Bower,
The Perfect English Spy
, p. 160.

 
‘down to take a dekko’: see BBC,
On This Day
, news.bbc.co.uk/onthisday/hi/dates/stories/may/9/newsid_4741000/4741060.stm

 
‘an extra pound of weight’: Elliott,
My Little Eye
, p. 24.

 
‘A tip-off from a British spy’: Corera,
MI6
, p. 78.

 
‘There will be blood’: Wright,
Spycatcher
, p. 74.

 
‘We’ll all be for the pavilion’: ibid., p. 75.

 
‘specially employed in connection’: Hale,
The Final Dive
, p. 176.

 
‘presumed drowned’: ibid.

 
‘I’m afraid it rather’: Wright,
Spycatcher
, p. 74.

 
‘missing or lost property’: Hale,
The Final Dive
, p. 172.

 
‘in trouble’: Elliott,
My Little Eye
, p. 24.

 
‘he hoped he was all right’: ibid.

 
‘such an unusual occurrence’: Hale,
The Final Dive
, p. 183.

 
‘regret about this incident’: ibid., p. 188.

 
‘completely unauthorized’: ibid.

 
‘paid no attention’: ibid., p. 183.

 
‘it can only be assumed’: ibid.

 
‘It would not be’: ibid., p. 184.

 
‘a shameful operation’: ibid., p. 191.

 
‘misconceived and inept operation’: Pincher,
Treachery
, p. 421.

 
‘Ridiculous’: Francis Elliott, ‘Cold War Papers Reveal Lost Diver’s Last Minutes’,
Independent on Sunday
, 11 June 2006.

 
‘a typical piece of MI6 adventurism’: Wright,
Spycatcher
, p. 73.

 
‘We’re still cloak and dagger’: Bower,
The Perfect English Spy
, p. 165.

 
‘one man Bay of Pigs’: ibid., p. 312.

 
‘A storm in a teacup’: Elliott,
My Little Eye
, p. 25.  

 
‘Crabb was both brave and patriotic’: ibid.

 
‘He almost certainly died’: ibid.

 
‘come down to the firm’: Borovik,
The Philby Files
,
p. 321.

 
‘Something unpleasant again’: ibid.

 

Chapter 14: Our Man in Beirut

 
‘In those days SIS kept in touch’: Andrew Lycett,
Ian Fleming
(London, 1996), p. 170.

 
‘Kemsley Press allowed’: ibid., p. 169.

 
‘doing secret service stuff’: ibid.

 
‘being re-engaged for reasons’: Seale and McConville,
Philby
,
p. 284.

 
‘The country could ill afford’: Cave Brown,
Treason in the Blood
,
p. 470.

 
‘I simply approved them’: Knightley,
The Master Spy
,
p. 199.

 
‘no appetite for reopening old wounds’: Bower,
The Perfect English Spy
, p. 289.

 
‘irritated that Elliott’: ibid., p. 292.

 
‘no emotion’: ibid.

 
‘unaware’: ibid., p. 235.

 
‘horrified if he knew’: ibid.

 
‘It was Nicholas Elliott’: Knightley,
The Master Spy
,
p. 206.

 
‘had an ersatz gaiety’: Elliott,
Umbrella
, p. 157.

 
‘The climate of Vienna’: ibid.

 
‘Haunted by Kim’s life of treason’: Richard Beeston
, Looking for Trouble: The Life and Times of a Foreign Correspondent
(London, 2006), p. 29.

 
‘she maintained in the hope’: Solomon and Litvinoff,
Baku to Baker Street
,
p. 211.

 
‘Lebanon was the only Arab country’: Beeston,
Looking for Trouble
, p. 28.

 
‘He was quintessentially English’: ibid., p. 29.

 
‘rangy, steady-drinking American’: ibid.  

 
‘If I should meet Kim’: Eleanor Philby,
The Spy I Loved
(London, 1968), p. 28.

 
‘What touched me first’: ibid.

 
‘Kim was a delightful companion’: ibid., p. 30.  

 
‘My soufflés were never’: ibid.

 
‘sound knowledge of’: Philby,
My Silent War
,
p. 199.

 
‘telling the British government’: ibid.

 
‘as conscientiously as possible’: ibid.

 
‘Petukhov, Soviet Trade Mission’: Borovik,
The Philby Files
,
p. 331.

 
‘I read your articles in the
Observer
’:
ibid.

 
‘total commitment’: Philby,
My Silent War
,
p. xxxi.

 
‘I stayed the course’: ibid.

 
‘influenced and modified’: ibid.

 
‘a hive of activity’: Modin,
My Five Cambridge Friends
, p. 234.

 
‘the intentions of the United States’: Philby,
My Silent War
,
p. 199.

 
‘idleness’: Cave Brown,
Treason in the Blood
,
p. 466.

 
‘No receipts, no money’: ibid.

 
‘helpful eye’: Solomon and Litvinoff,
Baku to Baker Street
, p. 210.

 
‘poor Aileen …’: ibid., p. 211.

 
‘might have been murdered’: Andrew,
Defence of the Realm
, p. 433.

 
‘considerable strength of character’: Elliott,
Umbrella
, p. 182.

BOOK: A Spy Among Friends
4.8Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Alva and Irva by Edward Carey
The Dying Light by Sean Williams, Shane Dix
Pig City by Louis Sachar
Extrasensory by Desiree Holt
Beautiful Girls by Gary S. Griffin
Roark (Women Of Earth Book 1) by Jacqueline Rhoades
The Great Hunt by Wendy Higgins