In 1974 a friend gifted me John Le Carre바카라s book Tinker, Tailor, soldier, Spy adding that it would be difficult to understand unless I knew how spies worked. Although I joined that 바카라business바카라 in 1976, it would still take a long time for me to understand the nuances of Cold War spy scrimmages. From then on, it was a long journey for me till 2017 when 바카라Outlook바카라 asked me to review Le Carre바카라s last 바카라Smiley바카라 novel, 바카라A Legacy of Spies바카라 (바카라A Coven of Spy Masters바카라, September 29, 2017).
Did Le Carre deliberately mystify and twist his plots by 바카라brow-furrowing Germanic aphorisms and quotations바카라, as mentioned by the 바카라London Review of Books바카라 on 20 March 1980 to hide his initial reputation among the highbrow critics that 바카라he couldn바카라t write바카라? Did 바카라Stasi바카라 consider him as an unimportant British spy resulting in recording nothing of importance in his file although he was posted to Bonn and Hamburg? In 2017 he revealed to the American National Public Radio (NPR) that his search of his own file with Stasi yielded nothing but press clippings although they had maintained 바카라a far more interesting file바카라 on his con-man father describing him as a rich arms dealer with intelligence connections, selling arms to the Indian subcontinent and Indonesia.
Were Le Carre바카라s main characters 바카라Smiley바카라 and 바카라Carla바카라 moulded on real persons or totally fictitious? In 1984 the late Donald McCormick, writing under the pseudonym of Richard Deacon had said that Le Carre had modelled 바카라Smiley바카라 on Sir Maurice Oldfield, who was MI-6 chief during 1973-78. In the late 1940s Oldfield was posted to Singapore where he developed great interest in Chinese astrology and on Mao Zedong바카라s budding intelligence unit. Deacon was told by his Chinese contacts that their intelligence knew, even in the 1950s, that Oldfield would one day head MI-6. French journalist Roger Faligot confirmed this in 2008 adding that Oldfield had obtained intelligence that Kang Sheng, intelligence chief of Mao, had advised him in the early 1950s to break with Moscow.
Deacon said that British film actor Alec Guinness had even copied Oldfield바카라s quirk of playing with his spectacles in the film adaptation of two of Le Carre바카라s novels. Surprisingly, Deacon also quotes Le Carre denying this. Instead he was supposed to have based Smiley after his old tutor Rev. Dr Vivian Green of Lincoln College, Oxford.
In 1979 Oldfield accepted Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher바카라s request to the post of Coordinator of Security & Intelligence in Northern Ireland to bring in a semblance of order between the warring Royal Ulster Constabulary and the British army while suppressing the insurgency. He was also able to raise the intelligence collection on Libya and others to new levels to deter insurgency.
Who was Le Carre바카라s model for 바카라Karla바카라? In popular imagination, especially in Europe, it was Markus Wolf or 바카라Mischa바카라, his Russian name or the 바카라Man without a face바카라. His autobiography, jointly written by British journalist Anne McElvoy in 1999, was a best seller. Wolf 바카라s achievements were copied by many film makers. His repeated tradecraft of using young handsome Stasi 바카라Romeo바카라 agents, called 바카라Sexpionage바카라 had produced great results. The 바카라Stasi Files바카라 came into the hands of the Western historians after the reunification of Germany in October 1990.
The other person, according to Americans was Rem Krassilnikov, who was the chief of the American department of the KGB바카라s Second Chief Directorate. James Risen, writing his obituary in New York Times (March 24, 2003) says that Krassilnikov was often compared with Karla, the famous antithesis of George Smiley. He had gained incomparable knowledge about the working of Western intelligence agencies after handling most of the Western defectors. His initial knowledge about Western intelligence was by debriefing MI-6 spies like Kim Philby and George Blake. In the 1980s he supplemented this by handling CIA and FBI defectors like Edward Lee Howard, Aldrich Ames and Robert Philip Hanssen.
Le Carre and Ian Fleming had raised the spying business to glamourous heights although in real life one may tend to agree with Stella Rimington, the first woman MI-5 chief, that the 바카라most successful spies are the quiet, apparently boring and dull people who go on doing the same thing in an unostentatious way, year after year바카라.
[The writer is a former Special Secretary, Cabinet Secretariat]