The Spycatcher Affair & MI5: The Scandal that Shook Britain with Tim Tate

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Episode
661 of 698
Duration
1H 3min
Language
English
Format
Category
History

Summary Tim Tate (Website) joins Andrew (X; LinkedIn) to discuss the Spycatcher Affair. Tim is a best-selling author and award-winning filmmaker.

What You’ll Learn Intelligence

Peter Wright: His background and motives

The contents of Spycatcher including the exposure of alleged soviet moles

The UK’s efforts to keep their secrets secret

The lasting effects of the Spycatcher Affair

Reflections

Personal secrecy vs. public security

Censorship and free speech

And much, much more …

Quotes of the Week "[Wright] found truly acres of paperwork from old files which had been disregarded and hadn't been properly followed up on and leads that hadn't been properly followed. And when he pulled at them, those threads of evidence, and when he chased it down, what he found, as often as not, was genuine reason to suspect that the penetration, the widespread penetration, was real and serious.” – Tim Tate . Resources SURFACE SKIM *Spotlight Resource*

To Catch a Spy: How the Spycatcher Affair brought MI5 in from the Cold, Tim Tate (Icon Books, 2024) *SpyCasts*

The Counterintelligence Chief with FBI Assistant Director Alan Kohler (2023)

St. Ermin’s Hotel, London – The History of a Legendary Spy Site with Stephen Duffy (2023)

The Information Battlespace – Foreign Denial and Deception with Bill Parquette (2022)

Dealing with Russia – A Conversation with Counterintelligence Legend Jim Olson (2022)

DEEPER DIVE Books

To Catch a Spy: The Art of Counterintelligence, J. Olson (Georgetown University Press, 2021)

Traitors Among Us: Inside the Spy Catcher's World, S. A. Herrington (Harvest Books, 2000)

The Spycatcher Affair, C. Pincher (St. Martin’s Press, 1988)

Spycatcher, P. Wright (Heinemann, 1987)

Primary Sources

Peter Wright Case (Part 1) (1987)

Peter Wright Case (Part 2) (1987)

Retired Spy Claims Cover Up in British Service (1984)

The Hollis Affair (1981)

The “Zinoviev” Letter Investigation (1924)

The Zimmermann Telegram (1917)

*Wildcard Resource*

Areopagitica (1644) by John Milton

Illegally published in the UK in protest to the Licensing Order of 1643, this polemic has since become one of the most influential documents defending the right to free speech and free publication.

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