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Go Softly In A House Of Spies

A comprehensive and crisply-written biography of R.N. Kao mirrors the warm individual, his formative assignments and the fine webs he바카라d later weave

Go Softly In A House Of Spies
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I started knowing well the late Rameshwar Nath Kao after 1977, when his erstwhile bur­ea­ucratic entourage deserted him to loneliness. I also witne­s­sed the same circles flocking around him in 1981 on his app­ointment as 바카라senior adviser바카라, only to abandon him in 1984 after Ind­ira Gandhi바카라s assassination.  

A secret of his success was his disinterest in projecting pers­onal power and achievements despite the extraordinary aura related to his position in those days. He thought big for the country, chose suitable means and persons for reaching the highest foreign echelons, and delegated without obs­essive supervision. He was ele­gant without being ostentatious, affectionate without being haughty. He did not splurge on secret funds nor did he create a huge supervisory security structure in his second assignment, which he could have. Above all, he was always a warm and kind man.  

Like John Le Carre바카라s George Smiley, he was willing to discreetly assist the organisation he had created, whenever his successors requested. He had nominated me for some of the most exciting but exacting ass­ignments while in office and later. I kept in touch with him even after my retirement in 1995, till a few months before his death in 2002.

It is not easy to write on the milestones in a spy chief바카라s life when most of it is under the shadows. Some try to cover the gaps by writing hagiographies, like the 654-page tome on CIA Chief Allen Dulles by James Srodes. Others do the opposite through unflattering, sensational biographies, like Anthony Summers바카라s volume on FBI director Edgar Hoover바카라s secret excesses.

However, Nitin Gokhale is refreshingly different. He modestly cautions the readers that his book is neither history nor a detective thriller, or even a comprehensive chronicle. Yet his jargon-free style captures the essence of Kao바카라s character, his low-profile communication style through 바카라understatements바카라 and his successes and reverses. It is commendable that Nitin is able to unmask considerable details of Kao바카라s unpublished life within such a short time, no doubt with RAW바카라s cooperation. As a person who knew Kao well, I could safely imagine that had he been alive, he would have approved Nitin바카라s factual book without any embellishments.

Nitin바카라s research into Kao바카라s early life, his challenging assignment in 1955 of representing India during the 바카라Kashmir Princess바카라 bomb attack investigation and his service under President Nkrumah of Ghana from 1958 for setting up their foreign intelligence unit was very informative even to RAW old guards. Details of Kao바카라s Ghana assignment (1958-59) were also a surprise to us as we thought that he was only asked to set up and train their foreign intelligence officers and not actually conduct intelligence operations as the de facto head of their intelligence wing.

The 바카라Kashmir Princess바카라 probe brought him in close contact with Chinese premier Zhou Enlai, who was the prime target of the bombing. That was Kao바카라s first exposure to the byzantine character of foreign intelligence. He had to set up a labyrinthine, three-way communications system with top leadership in Hong Kong, China and Indonesia. He also had to adjudicate between an evasive, British-controlled Hong Kong and Zhou바카라s demands. While Hong Kong was not keen to blame Taiwanese intelligence even while wanting Kao to reveal the Chinese mind, Zhou wanted him to influence the British investigation to suit his intelligence conclusions.

From Nitin바카라s account it is clear that Kao knew in 1955 that Zhou was deeply connected with Chi­nese intelligence. That proved correct when French journalist Roger Faligot claimed in 2019 that Zhou was in fact the founder of the special operations division 바카라Zhongyang Teke바카라 or 바카라Teke바카라 under the pseudonym 바카라Wu Hao바카라. In 1920, Zhou was operating a Chinese 바카라Hakka바카라 spy ring from Paris under the false identity of British businessman Stephen Knight. It invo­lved Chinese 바카라student-workers바카라 studying scie­nce in Fra­nce, Belgium and Germany, like Deng Xiaoping, and four future marshals in PLA like Chen Yi, Ye Jianying,  Zhu De and Nie Ron­­gzhen, who would later direct China바카라s atom bomb project. Faligot also says that Zhou cancelled his flight on Kashmir Princess on being alerted by his spies in the Hong Kong police.

Nitin바카라s mention of Kao바카라s observation that Zhou did not have good feelings towards Jawaharlal Nehru was also remarkably correct. It is commonly believed that Zhou and Nehru were great friends in the 1950s. This is disproved by top secret White House record of the 바카라memorandum of conversation바카라 dated February 23, 1972 between President Nixon and PM Zhou (Declassified in 1996), revealing the depth of Zhou바카라s anger against Soviet Union and Nehru. The first thing Zhou did was attacking Nehru as the aggressor; Nixon바카라no lover of India himself바카라had to restrain his uncontrolled tirade. Nitin quotes Kao to mention that Nehru too was aware of the Chinese threats, which was later confirmed by Howard B. Schaffer바카라s 1993 biography of former US ambassador to India Chester Bowles (1951-53 and 1963-69).

The book mentions Kao바카라s expert handling of external publicity through PSY-Ops during the 1971 war. It also mentions how RAW chief Suntook took the help of Kao to persuade Homi Sethna, then chairman of Atomic Energy Commission, to advise PM Morarji Desai in 1977 not to sign the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty. I was chosen by Kao, who had by then ret­ired, to convey the message to Sethna.

A similar incident happened in July 1981, indicating Kao바카라s strategic vision, which I forgot to mention to Nitin when he interviewed me. None, not even our closest foreign allies, would believe us when we were telling them through diplomatic and intelligence channels about the Pakistani clandestine bomb project. We then came to know that the New York Times was doing an investigative project on the 바카라Islamic bomb바카라 with the help of BBC바카라s Panorama. Kao, who was not yet security adviser, advised Suntook to direct me to approach a senior Paris-based journalist for arranging a meeting with the New York Times team, a very unusual step. As a result, authors Steve Weissman and Herbert Krosney met me in a Paris restaurant in July 1981 to get an exhaustive briefing on what RAW knew about Pakistani project. This was published in 1981 itself as The Islamic Bomb (Times Books). My interview was mentioned, not my name.

Nitin quotes Pupul Jayakar that Indira Gandhi was aware of the danger from foreign governments to her family after Bangladesh바카라s Mujibur Rahman and his family were assassinated in 1975. Kao had corrected Jayakar바카라s impression that the danger would 바카라come from Indian recruits who are likely to act as stooges of foreign powers바카라. By 1981, Indira Gandhi had changed her assessment. On May 8, 1981 she told A.C.N. Nambiar, one of her closest confidants from 1935 in Zurich that 바카라She did not worry of her safety바카라 and that he 바카라may convey this to Kao바카라. Nambiar, whose biography I wrote in 2017, was also a close friend of Nehru and a trusted colleague of Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose in Europe.

(The reviewer is a former special secretary, cabinet secretariat)

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