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In "Stalin's Apostles," spies relied on their pedigrees to evade suspicion

6 hours ago
  • #Cold War
  • #historical non-fiction
  • #espionage
  • The 'Cambridge Five' were a group of upper-class British spies recruited by the Soviets at Cambridge University in the 1930s, who later held high positions and leaked secrets to Moscow.
  • Their betrayals led to failed missions and deaths, such as the 1951 Ukraine parachute drop of anti-communist Ukrainians, which was compromised by Kim Philby's tip-off.
  • Antonia Senior's book 'Stalin's Apostles' focuses on the human cost of their actions, stripping away romanticism and highlighting their negative impact on lives and U.S.-British relations.
  • The spies were shielded by their elite backgrounds and the 'chapocracy' of mid-century Britain, which made it hard for authorities to suspect them despite red flags like alcohol issues and communist ties.
  • After the ring collapsed, consequences were mild for some; Kim Philby, for example, faced limited evidence and worked as a journalist in Beirut before defecting to the USSR in 1963.