Chapter One
The Origins of the Secret Service Bureau
The Security Service (MI5) and the Secret Intelligence Service (SIS
orMI6) began operations in October 1909 as a single organization, the
Secret Service Bureau, based in premises rented by a private detective,
retired Chief Inspector Edward ‘Tricky’ Drew, at 64 Victoria
Street, London SW1, opposite the Army and Navy Stores. The Bureau was
staffed initially by only two officers, the fifty-year-old Commander
Mansfield Cumming RN and an army captain fourteen years his junior,
Vernon Kell, who met for the first time on 4 October when, according to
Cumming’s diary, they ‘had a yarn over the future and agreed
to work together for the success of the cause’. Cumming and Kell
later parted company to become the first heads of, respectively, SIS and
MI5. For several months, however, they were based in the same room,
struggling, with minimal resources, ‘to deal both with espionage
in this country and with our foreign agents abroad’.
The Secret Service Bureau owed its foundation to the recommendations of
a sub-committee of the Committee of Imperial Defence, the chief defence
planning council of the realm, which had been instructed in March 1909
by the Liberal government of Herbert Asquith to consider ‘the
nature and extent of foreign espionage that is at present taking place
within this country and the danger to which it may expose us’. It
reported on 24 July: ‘The evidence which was produced left no
doubt in the minds of the subcommittee that an extensive system of
German espionage exists in this country and that we have no organisation
for keeping in touch with that espionage and for accurately determining
its extent or objectives.’ Most continental high commands would
have been surprised to discover that British intelligence was in such an
enfeebled state. There was a widespread myth that, ever since the days
when a secret service run by Queen Elizabeth I’s Secretary of
State, Sir Francis Walsingham, had successfully uncovered a number of
Catholic plots, British intelligence, like the British Empire, had grown
steadily in size and influence, spreading its tentacles across the
globe.
The myth was encouraged by Edwardian spy novelists. The most prolific
and successful of them, William Le Queux, allegedly Queen
Alexandra’s favourite novelist, assured his readers: ‘The
British Secret Service, although never so prominently before the public
as those unscrupulous
agents provocateurs of France and Russia,
is nevertheless equally active. It works in silence and secrecy, yet
many are its successful counterplots against the machinations of
England’s enemies.’6 Le Queux (pronounced ‘Kew’)
was a Walter Mitty figure who fantasized that he had played a personal
part in some of these successes. In
Secrets of the Foreign Office
published in 1903, Le Queux, thinly disguised as Duckworth Drew,
‘secret agent in the employ of the Foreign Office, and, next to
his Majesty’s Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs, one of the
most powerful and important pillars of England’s supremacy’,
quickly gets the better of the long-serving French Foreign Minister,
The´ophile Delcasse´ (equally thinly disguised as Monsieur
Delanne). Delcasse´, alias Delanne, ‘admitted that he longed
to smoke one of my excellent light-coloured Corona Superbos’. But
there was more to Drew’s cigars than met the Minister’s
inattentive eye: ‘To this day Monsieur le Ministre is in ignorance
that that particular Corona had been carefully prepared by me with a
solution of cocculus indicus . . .’ Outwitted by the cunningly
prepared Corona, the disoriented Delanne revealed the secrets Drew
(sometimes considered an Edwardian prototype of James Bond) had come to
collect.8 Such fantasies found a ready market. Like Thomas Hardy and H.
G. Wells, both vastly superior writers, Le Queux was paid the top rate
of 12 guineas per thousand words and published far more than either.
At the opposite extreme of literary merit from Le Queux, Rudyard Kipling
gave an equally optimistic assessment of British successes in the
intelligence duel with Russia on India’s North-West Frontier. In
Kim (probably the finest of all spy novels, though it transcends
the world of espionage), unseen but ubiquitous agents of the British Raj
play ‘the Great Game that never ceases day and night throughout
India’. And they do so with a subtlety quite beyond the capacity
of Tsarist Russia, ‘the dread Power of the North’, and its
French ally, whose emissaries are ‘smitten helpless’. So far
as theWar Office were concerned, the myth of a far-flung intelligence
network, whether promulgated by Kipling or by lesser literary talents,
had the incidental advantage of avoiding public revelation of British
intelligence weakness. ‘The only consolation’, they
concluded in 1907, ‘is that every foreign government implicitly
believes that we already have a thoroughly organised and efficient
European Secret Service.’
All that Britain actually had were small and underfunded military and
naval intelligence departments, both with little capacity to collect
secret intelligence, and the Metropolitan Police Special Branch (MPSB),
founded in 1883 to counter the threat to the capital from Fenian (Irish
Republican) terrorism, which had moved on to small-scale investigation
of other terrorist and subversive threats but had minimal expertise in
counterespionage. The three agencies had little influence in Whitehall.
Spenser Wilkinson, first Chichele Professor ofWar at Oxford University,
compared the War Office’s use of their Intelligence Department
(ID) during the Boer War (1899–1902) to a man who ‘kept a
small brain for occasional use in his waistcoat pocket and ran his head
by clockwork’. Although the 1903 Royal Commission on the War in
South Africa concluded that the ID had been ‘undermanned for the
work of preparation for a great war’,14 once the war was over the
pressure for intelligence reform and more resources declined.
Within the Directorate of Military Operations at the War Office,
however, two diminutive departments, MO2 and MO3, were established in
1903 with responsibility for, respectively, foreign intelligence and
counterespionage. MO3 was the direct predecessor of MI5. Superintendent
William Melville, who had been head of the Met’s Special Branch
for the previous decade, was recruited to carry out secret
investigations for both MO2 and MO3, later becoming chief detective of
the Security Service during its first eight years. Since he qualified
for a police pension of £240 and received an additional £400
from the War Office, the terms were financially attractive.
Melville’s appointment was not publicly announced. Officially, he
simply retired from the Special Branch. The Times reported that Scotland
Yard had lost the services of ‘the most celebrated detective of
the day’.15 The award of the MVO (Member of the Royal Victorian
Order) to Melville on his official retirement in 1903 also recognized
his role in overseeing, with very limited resources, the security of
Queen Victoria, King Edward VII and other members of the Royal Family
both at home and during their continental travels at a time when
European heads of state were more regularly threatened with
assassination by revolutionary and anarchist groups than at any time
before or since. Those assassinated on the continent included a Russian
tsar, a French president, an empress of Austria-Hungary, a king of
Italy, prime ministers of Spain and Russia, but no British royal or
minister. Among foreign royals whose security Melville helped to protect
during visits to Britain was Kaiser Wilhelm II, who presented him at
various times with a gold watch and chain, a ring and a cigarette case.
The fact that early Security Service records date Melville’s
employment from 1903, six years before MI5 was founded, is evidence that
his work for it after 1909 was seen at the time as a continuation
and extension of his earlier War Office investigations. During his
investigations for both the War Office and the Secret Service Bureau,
Melville operated from an office at 25 Victoria Street, Westminster,
using the alias ‘W. Morgan, General Agent’. Melville was
well acquainted with Gustav Steinhauer, who became head in 1901 of the
British section of the German Admiralty’s newly founded
intelligence service, the Nachrichten-Abteilung, usually known as
‘N’. Former Kriminalkommissar of the Berlin police,
Steinhauer, who grandly termed himself the ‘Kaiser’s
spy’, had trained as a private detective at the Pinkerton Agency
in Chicago and spoke English fluently with an American accent. He
accompanied the Kaiser to England in 1901 as his personal bodyguard when
Wilhelm II came to pay his last respects to his dying grandmother, Queen
Victoria, and later to attend her funeral. A detective inspector in the
MPSB described Steinhauer as ‘a handsome soldierly figure who had
seen more courts than camps’. Steinhauer remembered Melville as
‘a silent, reserved man, never given to talking wildly’, who
entertained him to dinner with cigars and ‘one or two bottles of
wine’ at Simpson’s Grand Cigar Divan in the Strand. The
presence of so much European royalty at Queen Victoria’s funeral
inevitably led to fears of assassination attempts. Steinhauer later gave
a melodramatic account of how he had accompanied Melville in a hunt for
three homicidal Russian nihilists, who made their escape after allegedly
killing a female informant of the Special Branch. Melville told the
Kaiser he had been impressed by Steinhauer’s intelligence
expertise. ‘Yes, Steinhauer is a splendid fellow!’ replied
the Kaiser.
In the spring of 1904 Melville sent his assistant, Herbert Dale Long, on
the first of several missions to Germany on behalf ofMO2 under
commercial cover, probably to inquire into German naval construction. A
fragmentary file on Melville’s early work for MO3 (renamed MO5 in
1907) suggests that his early priorities in Britain (particularly during
the Russo-Japanese War of 1904–5) were to monitor the operations
not of German intelligence but of the Okhrana, the Tsarist intelligence
and security service. One of the documents in Melville’s file
(received from a Colonel Dawson) dramatically describes the Okhrana
chief, Pyotr Rachkovsky, as ‘Head of all the [Russian] secret
service police in the whole world, & the most important man in
Russia. Commander of the Legion of Honour in France, and has agents
throughout the whole world.’ When stationed in the West,
Rachkovsky lived in much greater opulence than his Soviet successors.
Melville reported on 25 November 1904:
I know him personally, having frequently met him in London and he often
called upon me in Scotland Yard when I introduced him to some of my
superiors . . . When in London, Ratchkowsky always had some of his
officers with him and invariably had a suite of rooms at the Savoy
Hotel. I was told that he lived in a similar style in Paris, and know
that he did so at Copenhagen.
Melville was probably aware that Rachkovsky and other Russian foreign
intelligence officers were responsible for a series of explosions and
agentprovocateur operations on the continent designed to discredit
Russian revolutionary e´migre´s. He is unlikely to have
known, however, that Rachkovsky was probably also responsible for the
fabrication of the infamous anti-Semitic forgery
The Protocols of the
Elders of Zion, which purports to describe a Jewish plot for world
domination. Between the wars, the
Protocols, much praised by
Hitler in
Mein Kampf, emerged as one of the central texts in Nazi
anti-Semitism, as well as later appearing on numerous early
twenty-first-century Islamist websites.
From 1905 to 1907, Melville concentrated increasingly on German rather
than Russian espionage. Reports of suspicious behaviour by German
residents and visitors convinced him that German spies were
reconnoitring invasion routes in England for the German army. In 1906 he
believed that he had identified a group of spies in Epping:
I mentioned to the Superintendent of Police at Epping that the Germans
might be spies; he laughed at the idea as being ridiculous, adding,
‘Spies! What could they spy here?’ Argument was useless. The
fact remains that undoubtedly they were spies, and their business, I
should say, was to become thoroughly conversant with the routes from the
sea coast to London, and thus to be able to guide a German army landed
in this country.
There can be little doubt that the Epping Superintendent’s
scepticism was fully justified. In other parts of the country, when
making his inquiries about German spies, Melville also found the local
police ‘absolutely useless’. He was not, however, to be
deterred by the scepticism of the police from approaching the Home
Office:
Owing to the almost continuous enquiries on the Eastern coast re
suspected Germans, alleged staff rides by Germans, etc, from 1905 to
1907 I submitted reports outlining a scheme of surveillance on all
suspected foreigners around the country. In them I suggested the
utilisation of the Police, the Postal authorities and the Coast Guard
Service.
Unsurprisingly, the Home Office failed to respond to Melville’s
proposals. By the time Major (later Brigadier General Sir) James Edmonds
became head of MO5 late in 1907, ‘its activities had been allowed
to die down’. Save for Melville, Edmonds’s staff consisted
only of another major whose main preoccupation was cultivating a
parliamentary constituency which three years later elected him as its
ConservativeMP. Apart from Melville’s reports, MO5 files when
Edmonds took over ‘contained only papers relating to the South
African [Boer] War and some scraps about France and Russia –
nothing whatever about Germany’. Germany, however, was
Edmonds’s main preoccupation. He seems to have been influenced by
both Melville’s alarmist reports and the international tension
generated by British–German naval rivalry. The Entente Cordiale of
1904, followed by the Triple Entente of 1907, had resolved
Britain’s differences with France and Russia, both of which were
to become wartime allies. The main threat to British security now came
from the expanding German High Seas Fleet. The security of Victorian
Britain had depended on Britannia’s ability to rule the waves with
a navy which was by far the largest in the world. But, with the
launching of the new British battleship
Dreadnought in 1906,
Anglo-German naval rivalry took a new and dangerous turn. By its size
and firepower the
Dreadnought threatened to make all other
battleships obsolete. With ten 12-inch guns, each with a range of over 8
miles, it was more than a match for any two of its predecessors.
Overnight, the existing Grand Fleet of the Royal Navy, like every other
navy in the world, seemed out of date. It was feared that the German
High Seas Fleet, which also began building the dreadnought class of
battleship, might soon catch up with the Grand Fleet and threaten the
naval supremacy on which British security depended.
(Continues...)
Excerpted from "Defend the Realm"
by Christopher Andrew.
Copyright (C) by Christopher Andrew.
Excerpted by permission.
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