The Venlo incident : a true story of double-dealing, captivity, and a murderous Nazi plot /

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Author / Creator:Best, S. Payne (Sigismund Payne)
Imprint:London : Frontline Books ; New York : Skyhorse Pub., 2009.
Description:xvii, 260 p., [14] p. of plates : ill., map ; 22 cm.
Language:English
Subject:
Format: Print Book
URL for this record:http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/8000384
Hidden Bibliographic Details
Other authors / contributors:Jones, Nigel H.
ISBN:9781848325586 (Frontline)
1848325584 (Frontline)
9781602399464 (Skyhorse)
1602399468 (Skyhorse)
Notes:"First pub. by Hutchinson & Co (London) in 1950. This ed. includes a new introduction by Nigel Jones."--T.p. verso.
committed to retain 20170930 20421213 HathiTrust
Summary:On November 9, 1939, Captain Sigismund Payne Best and other members of Britain's ultra-secret Z service sat near a café in Venlo, The Netherlands, waiting to meet with whom supposedly-sound intelligence told them would be German resistance leaders. In reality, what they would meet at Venlo was an SS ambush--leading to the murder of Best's Z associate and the Nazis' seizure of a plain text list of British under-cover agents. It was a massive disaster for British intelligence and a crucial turning point of war-time espionage. Best survived Venlo to tell of the shocking intelligence coups that precipitated the attack. His harrowing account of torture at the hands of the Nazis and five years in the infamous Sachenhausen and Dachau concentration camps offers unparalleled, first-hand details from inside the Third Reich. --from publisher description
Other form:Online version: Best, S. Payne (Sigismund Payne) Venlo incident. London : Frontline Books ; New York : Skyhorse Pub., 2009
Description
Summary:In November 1969, the Nazis engineered the so-called Venlo Incident as a pretext for invading the Netherlands. The plot was carried out by the Gestapo's sister agency, the Sicherheitsdienst (SD). Following orders from Himmler, two British Intelligence officers, Sigismund Payne Best and Richard Stevens were captured from the Café Backus in the town of Venlo. Best had been working to establish contact with German officers plotting against Hitler. The Netherlands had been an ideal ground for operations, because of its proximity to Germany and the fact that Dutch Intelligence was badly funded - hence they relied on an intelligence sharing system established in WWI. When Best met the three agents - including Walter Schellenberg (posing as 'Major Schaemmel')-he was carrying with him a list of British agents who were working in Europe. When he arrived at the café, which was just over the Netherlands border, he realized he had walked into a trap. A Dutch intelligence officer who accompanied them, Dirk Klop, was mortally wounded. Best and Stevens were taken over the border into Germany. After their Berlin interrogation and torture they were taken to the notorious Sachsenhausen concentration camp. Hitler used the incident - together with the Elser bomb plot as an excuse for war with the Netherlands, claiming their involvement with Britain violated their neutrality. As Nigel Jones explains, the incident was crucial in making the British suspicious of dealings with anti-Hitler resistance. AUTHOR: Sigsmund Payne Best was a British Secret Intelligence Service (SIA, more commonly known as MI-6) agent during World War I and World War II. While head of the highly secret Section Z in the Netherlands he was captured and imprisoned. He died in 1978. ILLUSTRATIONS 8 pages of plates *
Item Description:"First pub. by Hutchinson & Co (London) in 1950. This ed. includes a new introduction by Nigel Jones."--T.p. verso.
Physical Description:xvii, 260 p., [14] p. of plates : ill., map ; 22 cm.
ISBN:9781848325586
1848325584
9781602399464
1602399468