This is the first detailed study of Britain's open source intelligence (OSINT) operations during the Second World War, showing how accurate and influential OSINT could be and ultimately how those who analysed this intelligence would shape British post-war policy towards the Soviet Union.
Following the Nazi invasion of the Soviet Union in June 1941, the enemy and neutral press covering the German occupation of the Baltic states offered the British government a vital stream of OSINT covering the entire German East. OSINT was the only form of intelligence available to the British from the Nazi-occupied Soviet Union, due to the Foreign Office suspension of all covert intelligence gathering inside the Soviet Union. The risk of jeopardising the fragile Anglo-Soviet alliance was considered too great to continue covert intelligence operations. In this book, Wheatley primarily examines OSINT acquired by the Stockholm Press Reading Bureau (SPRB) in Sweden and analysed and despatched to the British government by the Foreign Research and Press Service (FRPS) Baltic States Section and its successor, the Foreign Office Research Department (FORD).
Shedding light on a neglected area of Second World War intelligence and employing useful case studies of the FRPS/FORD Baltic States Section's Intelligence,British Intelligence and Hitler's Empire in the Soviet Union, 1941-1945makes a new and important argument which will be of great value to students and scholars of British intelligence history and the Second World War.
Ben Wheatleyis an Honorary Research Fellow in the Department of History at the University of East Anglia, UK.
This is an important study that examines a largely-ignored but significant piece of Second World War history. Ben Wheatley points out that intelligence gathering consists of far more than glamorousfemme fatalespies and surreptitious document drops in parks, but is fundamentally the meticulous gathering of information fromlsˆ