
Preface.
Foreword.
Chapter One. - A Review of the Spy System.
Chapter Two. - Stieber.
Chapter Three. - Training.
Chapter Four. - Military Spies.
Chapter Five. - Naval Espionage.
Chapter Six. - Diplomatic Espionage.
Chapter Seven. - Communications.
Chapter Eight. - Women Spies.
An urgent, first‑hand account of how a sophisticated German espionage network operated inside Britain before the war, this work pulls back the curtain on a hidden threat that many officials and citizens chose to ignore. Drawing on years of personal investigation and a rare glimpse into secret intelligence files, the author details the systematic recruitment, communications, and daily freedoms enjoyed by enemy agents living openly in London’s streets and cafés.
Beyond the stark facts, the narrative condemns the government’s half‑hearted response, exposing the bureaucratic tug‑of‑war between the War Office and the Home Office that left the country vulnerable. Readers will discover how ordinary reports from the public were dismissed, how alien “interns” were released, and how a seemingly ordinary neighbourhood could become a hub for covert plotting. The book invites listeners to confront a chilling chapter of history while questioning the balance between security and complacency.
Language
en
Duration
~3 hours (211K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Nick Hodson of London, England
Release date
2012-11-23
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects
Some of literature’s most enduring works were created without a known name attached, which gives them an extra sense of mystery. In many cases, the missing identity shifts attention away from the writer and onto the story, ideas, or tradition behind the work.
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