April 21, 2010
by intelNews

De Graaf
By IAN ALLEN | intelNews.org |
A new book published by the Pennsylvania State University Press sheds new light into the life and work of mysterious Agent 235, Canada’s mysterious mid-20th-century spy known as ‘Johnny’. In Johnny: A Spy’s Life, R.S. Rose and Gordon Scott present the outcome of 14 years of research on ‘Johnny’, whose real name was Johann Heinrich Amadeus de Graaf. De Graaf was born in Germany in 1894, but later moved to Britain, and at the start of World War II worked as an informant for MI6. Although he conducted some of his operations in Germany, most of them took place in the UK, where he unmasked a number of native pro-Nazi sympathizers and agents of the Gestapo. Read more of this post
New book on Canada’s mysterious Agent 235
April 21, 2010 by intelNews 2 Comments
De Graaf
By IAN ALLEN | intelNews.org |
A new book published by the Pennsylvania State University Press sheds new light into the life and work of mysterious Agent 235, Canada’s mysterious mid-20th-century spy known as ‘Johnny’. In Johnny: A Spy’s Life, R.S. Rose and Gordon Scott present the outcome of 14 years of research on ‘Johnny’, whose real name was Johann Heinrich Amadeus de Graaf. De Graaf was born in Germany in 1894, but later moved to Britain, and at the start of World War II worked as an informant for MI6. Although he conducted some of his operations in Germany, most of them took place in the UK, where he unmasked a number of native pro-Nazi sympathizers and agents of the Gestapo. Read more of this post
Filed under Expert news and commentary on intelligence, espionage, spies and spying Tagged with Agent 235, book news and reviews, Brazil, Canada, Canadian Nazi Party, China, Cliff Harvison, espionage, Germany, Gertrude Kruger, Gestapo, informants, Japan, Johann Heinrich Amadeus de Graaf, Manchuria, MI6, News, Romania, Royal Canadian Mounted Police, UK, United States, USSR, World War II