Summary
An examination of one of the most important yet underexplored aspects of World War II--intelligence--shows how espionage successes and failures by the United States, Britain, Russia, Germany, and Japan influenced the course of the war and its final outcome. Full description
- Before the deluge. Seekers after truth ; The British: gentlemen and players ; The Russians: temples of espionage
- The storm breaks. The "fiction flood" ; Shadowing Canaris
- Miracles take a little longer: Bletchley. "Tips" and "cillis" ; Flirting with America
- The dogs that barked. "Lucy's" people ; Sorge's warnings ; The orchestra plays ; The deaf man in the Kremlin
- Divine winds. Mrs Ferguson's tea set ; The Japanese ; The man who won Midway
- Muddling and groping: the Russians at war. Centre mobilises ; The end of Sorge ; The second source ; Gourevitch takes a train
- Britain's secret war machine. The sharp end ; The brain ; At sea
- 'Mars': the bloodiest deception. Gehlen ; "Agent Max"
- The orchestra's last concert
- Guerrilla. Resisters and raiders ; SOE
- Hoover's G-men, Donovan's wild men. Adventurers ; Ivory towers ; Allen Dulles: talking to Germans
- Russia's partisans: terrorising both sides
- Islands in the storm. The Abwehr's Irish jig ; No man's land
- A little help from their friends. "It stinks, but somebody has to do it" ; American traitors
- The knowledge factories. Agents ; The jewel of sources ; Production lines ; Infernal machines
- 'Blunderhead': the English patient
- Eclipse of the Abwehr. Hitler's Bletchleys ; "Cicero" ; The fantasists ; The "good" Nazi
- Battlefields. Wielding the Ultra wand ; Suicide spies ; Tarnished triumph
- Black widows, few white knights. Fighting Japan ; Fighting each other ; The enemy: groping in the dark
- 'Enormoz'
- Decoding victory.