The Double-Cross System

J. C. Masterman

T

he true story of the daring double agents who helped win the war, this secret report was never intended to go beyond a very select audience within the government and security services. Now published in its entirety, it is impossible to get closer to the desperate world of war-time espionage than this first-hand account written by a key player of the game.

The Double-Cross System

Introduced by Norman Holmes Pearson. Three-quarter bound in cloth with front board printed with a photograph of the Royal Navy in action during Operation Overlord, June 1944. Set in Sabon with Kabel Heavy display. 256 pages. Frontispiece and 12 pages of black & white plates. 9½" × 6½" Plates.

Superbly written... maintains an attractive balance between the heroism of the action and the cool tone of the telling’
NEW YORK TIMES BOOK REVIEW

Filled with highly sensitive information about espionage, this secret report was never intended to go beyond a very select audience within the government and security services. The man who wrote it in 1945 was J. C. Masterman, MI5 recruit and leader of the shadowy XX Committee. He was the mastermind behind one of the war’s most remarkable achievements: finding, turning and then running almost every Nazi agent to penetrate the British Isles.

No man knew more about the dangers of double-dealing and counter-espionage, and in writing his report, Masterman was keen to give the most complete account possible (albeit braced with a dry wit). The exploits of the intelligence service make hair-raising reading: some German agents made attempts to escape, ­overpowering their guards; others had to be trusted to meet their German paymasters alone. On a daily or weekly basis, the committee had to decide what information to leak to the enemy – should they seek to mislead, or divulge truthful intelligence in order to build conviction for a future move? Occasional failures (‘Tricycle’ picked up information that pointed to Pearl Harbour, but a lack of Anglo-American co-operation at the time meant it was not acted upon), were counteracted by the enormous success of ‘Operation Fortitude’, a significant campaign of misinformation to disguise the true location of the D-day landings.

Redolent with a sense of immediacy and absolute authenticity, it is impossible to get closer to the desperate world of war-time espionage than this first-hand account written by a key player of the game.