The years 1945-61 saw the greatest transformation in weaponry that has ever taken place, as atomic and thermonuclear bombs, intercontinental ballistic missiles and chemical and biological weapons were developed by the superpowers. It was also a distinct era in Western intelligence collection. These were the years of the Germans. Mass interrogation in West Germany and spying in East Germany represented the most important source of intelligence on Soviet
war-related science, weapons development and military capability until 1956 and a key one until 1961. This intelligence fuelled the arms race and influenced Western scientific research, weapons development, and
intelligence collection.Using intelligence and policy documents held in British and US archives and records of the Ministry of State Security (MfS) of the former German Democratic Republic (GDR), this book is the most penetrating study of the scientific intelligence-gathering and subversive operations of the British, US, and West German intelligence services in the period to date. East Germany's scientific potential was contained by inducing leading scientists and
engineers to defect to the West, and Paul Maddrell shows that the US Government's policy of 'containment' was more aggressive than has hitherto been accepted. He also demonstrates that the Western secret
services' espionage in the GDR was very successful, even though the MfS and KGB achieved triumphs against them. George Blake twice did appalling damage the MI6's spy networks. The book reveals the identity of the most distinguished scientist to spy for the CIA as yet uncovered.
Industry Reviews
An excellent account...easily accessible...it provides stimulating reading Pauline Elkes, History ...a valuable contribution to the early history of the Cold War Calder Walton, English Historical Review a highly informative book, which not only offers much new and to some extent surprising information but also once again clearly underlines the point that the Cold War was a comprehensive struggle, to which the combatants committed themselves completely. Dr Bernd Stover, H-Soz-u-Kult ...a wealth of empirical evidence that broadens our understanding of the early years of the Cold War. Dr Gary Bruce, German History Research into intelligence cannot do better than the synthesis of such varied sources. Maddrell is one of those who are thus taking this difficult area of research forward into the future. This empirically well-supported analysis by Paul Maddrell is exciting to read. It fits very neatly into the researches of Bernd Stover, Armin Wagner and Matthias Uhl into Stovers presentation of the Cold War context and into Wagner and Uhls examination of the operations against the GDR of the Organization Gehlen (later the BND). Helmut Muller-Enbergs, Deutschland Archiv Vol 40, No 6 Maddrell's book is an example of what can be accomplished by a dedicated author and is a significant contribution to the history of cold war intelligence. Jeffrey T. Richelson, Technology and Culture Spying on Science is an important contribution to Cold War and intelligence history. [It] contains a wealth of detail about how the British and American intelligence services operated Ben Fischer, Formerly the Chief Historian of the CIA, International Journal of Intelligence and Counter-Intelligence