Double Cross in Cairo: The True Story of the Spy Who Turned the Tide of War in the Middle East: The True Story of the Spy Who Changed the Tide of War in the Middle East

Double Cross in Cairo: The True Story of the Spy Who Turned the Tide of War in the Middle East: The True Story of the Spy Who Changed the Tide of War in the Middle East

by NigelWest (Author)

Synopsis

As part of the infamous Double Cross operation, Jewish double agent Renato Levi proved to be one of the Allies' most devastating weapons in World War Two. ln 1941, with the help of Ml6, Levi built an extensive spy-ring in North Africa and the Middle East. But, most remarkably, it was entirely fictitious. This network of imagined informants peddled dangerously false misinformation to Levi's unwitting German handlers. His efforts would distort any enemy estimates of Allied battle plans for the remainder of the war. His communications were infused with just enough truth to be palatable, and just enough imagination to make them irresistible. ln a vacuum of seemingly trustworthy sources, Levi's enemies not only believed in the CHEESE network, as it was codenamed, but they came to depend upon it. And, by the war's conclusion, he could boast of having helped the Allies thwart Rommel in North Africa, as well as diverting whole armies from the D-Day landing sites. He wielded great influence and, as a double agent, he was unrivalled. Until now, Levi's devilish deceptions and feats of derring-do have remained completely hidden. Using recently declassified files, Double Cross in Cairo uncovers the heroic exploits of one of the Second World War's most closely guarded secrets.

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 352
Publisher: Biteback
Published: 20 Jan 2015

ISBN 10: 1849547963
ISBN 13: 9781849547963

Author Bio
Nigel West is a military historian specialising in security and intelligence topics. He was voted 'the experts' expert' by a panel of other spy writers in The Observer in November 1989, and the Sunday Times has commented: 'His information is so precise that many people believe he is the unofficial historian of the secret services. West's sources are undoubtedly excellent. His books are peppered with deliberate clues to potential frontpage stories.' He is on the editorial board of the lnternational Journal of lntelligence and Counterlntelligence and Global War Studies and, for the past three years, he has chaired the panel of judges for the annual St Ermin's lntelligence Book of the Year Award. He is also the recipient of the US ssociation of Former lntelligence Officers' first Lifetime Literature Achievement Award.