The Times

December 16, 2006

 


Family at war with MI6 over secret files of Britain's greatest spy against
the Nazis


Ben MacIntyre


*  Cherie Booth makes the case for disclosure 


*  Agent exposed details of Nazi nuclear project














Rosbaud was so effective as a spy that some feared he was a double agent 



A fierce legal tussle has broken out between Cherie Booth, QC, and MI6 over
top-secret files that relate to “The Griffin”, an Austrian who provided
Britain with vital intelligence on the Nazi atom bomb programme during the
Second World War. 

The Prime Minister’s wife, who is representing the family of the secret
agent, Paul Rosbaud, has lodged a claim demanding that MI6, then usually
known as the Secret Intelligence Service (SIS), release all its information
on the case “so that the public can properly evaluate and appreciate the
undoubtedly great contribution [he] made to the Allied victory at
considerable personal risk”. 

The Investigatory Powers Tribunal, the legal body that investigates the
conduct of the Intelligence Service, has declined to rule on the issue, but
the Rosbaud family has vowed to continue the campaign until the truth about
the German agent is revealed. 

Rosbaud was one of the most important agents of the war. A scientist
bitterly opposed to the Nazi regime, he provided Britain with valuable
intelligence on jet aircraft, radar, flying bombs and Nazi attempts to
develop the atomic bomb. 

At the end of the war, Rosbaud was spirited out of Germany in British
military uniform and settled in London. He died in 1963. 

For years MI6 has refused all requests to make the Rosbaud files public,
claiming that the information falls under a blanket ban on releasing
material relevant to national security. 

In her legal submission, Ms Booth argued that such rules do not apply to the
Rosbaud case. She wrote: “There is no basis on which Mr Rosbaud’s identity
needs to remain confidential [and] there is no rational basis on which it
can be said that the release of files on Mr Rosbaud would cause
ascertainable harm to defence, international relations, national security or
the economic interests of the UK.” 

Vincent Frank-Steiner, a nephew of Rosbaud, believes that the refusal of MI6
to release the files may be “an act of self-protection because they made
some mistakes” in handling Agent Griffin. He says that the contribution that
Rosbaud made to the war was so important that the full story should now be
revealed. 

“He probably contributed more than any other single private person to defeat
Hitler’s Germany,” Dr Frank-Steiner said. 

Paul Wenzel Rosbaud was born in the Austrian town of Graz in 1896, and
studied physics and metallurgy. As a young soldier during the First World
War he was captured by the British, an experience that left him with a
profound admiration for Britain. “My first two days as a prisoner under
British guard were the origins of my long-time anglophilia,” he later wrote.
“They did not treat us as enemies, but as unfortunate losers of the war.” 

A liberal intellectual married to a Jewish woman, he watched in horror as
Hitler rose to power in Germany, but meanwhile his career blossomed: he
became editor of the important scientific periodical Metallwirtschaft, and
worked as a scientific expert for the large German publisher Springer
Verlag. 

Rosbaud, who was urbane, charming and highly intelligent, came to know many
of the top scientists in Germany. In public, he was part of the German
scientific establishment; in private, he was plotting against the Nazi
regime. 

In 1938 Rosbaud smuggled his wife and daughter to the safety of London, with
the help of Frank Foley, the MI6 station chief in Berlin. Foley, posing as a
passport officer, helped thousands of Jews to flee Germany. He also
recruited Rosbaud as Der Greif, Agent Griffin. 

The code name was grimly ironic: Griffin was the name of one of Hitler’s
favourite alsatians. Rosbaud was offered the chance to stay in Britain but
declared that he would rather return to Germany to fight a secret battle
against the Nazi regime. 

One of his first and most significant acts as a British agent came in
January 1939, when he received a scientific paper from Otto Hahn, the father
of nuclear chemistry, describing how he had split the atom. Realising the
immense destructive potential of uranium fission, Rosbaud pulled an article
that had already been typeset in the physics magazine Naturwissenschaften
and inserted Hahn’s discovery in its place, thus tipping off scientists
around the world and setting off the race to build the atom bomb. 

Many nuclear scientists believe that the speed with which Rosbaud moved to
make the findings public indicates that he was aware that, if he did not do
so, the Gestapo would realise the importance of the discovery and swiftly
suppress it, giving the Nazis an unassailable lead in the nuclear race. 

While gathering as much scientific information as he could find, Rosbaud
helped other Jewish families to escape the persecution, most notably the
Jewish physicist Lise Meitner, whose 30-year collaboration with Hahn
pioneered nuclear physics. 

Throughout the war, Rosbaud sent a stream of information to MI6 at the rate
of about one message a month. These were smuggled to Britain via the French
Resistance or through the Norwegian intelligence organisation XU. Sometimes
he would send messages encoded in books or in microfilm hidden on flights
between Berlin and Oslo. 

Although the exact details of the information that he passed remain sealed
in the MI6 archives, Rosbaud is believed to have furnished details of the V2
rockets being constructed at Peenemünde on the Baltic coast. He also
informed the British that the German project to build the nuclear bomb would
not succeed. For reasons that remain mysterious — and may explain the
unwillingness of MI6 to release the Griffin files — this information was not
passed on to the Americans. 

As a journalist and writer, Rosbaud could travel relatively freely around
Nazi Germany, and his inquisitive questions seem to have raised few
suspicions. In Britain, however, his reports were so detailed that some in
MI6 began to wonder whether he might be a double agent, feeding
disinformation. Intriguingly, Rosbaud managed to get out of Berlin the day
after the failed July Plot to assassinate Hitler, perhaps indicating links
with the conspirators. 

At the end of the war, when Rosbaud came to London, he continued to work as
a scientist and later went into business with Robert Maxwell, an army
captain who had been press officer in Berlin for the Foreign Office and who
was starting out his career as a publisher. It was Rosbaud who came up with
the name Pergamon Press for Maxwell’s company, though a furious row
permanently ended their partnership soon afterwards. 

Rosbaud even concealed his wartime espionage from his wife. He never asked
for recognition and destroyed many of his private papers. The official
history of the SIS never mentioned him by name, and referred only to “a
well-placed writer for a German scientific journal who was in touch with the
SIS from spring 1942”. Officially, Agent Griffin never existed. 

The CIA also denies that it has any material relating to Rosbaud, although a
memo from the US Justice Department dated 1955 concedes that “his activities
on behalf of the Allied cause were successful and of such importance that
even today they cannot be disclosed”. 

A biography of Rosbaud, by Arnold Kramish, was published in 1986, but
without access to the MI6 archives it raised as many questions as it
answered. What, exactly, had Rosbaud revealed to the British? How had he,
with his Jewish friends and Jewish wife, escaped the attentions of the
Gestapo for so long? Why did the British fail to inform the Americans when
they learnt from this impeccable source that the German atomic bomb
programme was a failure? Above all, why is MI6, 60 years later, determined
to keep the lid on the full story of Agent Griffin? 

As Ms Booth pointed out in her legal submission to the tribunal, a book has
been written about Frank Foley (Foley: the Spy who Saved 10,000 Jews by
Michael Smith) and a film of his life is being planned, yet the truth about
Rosbaud, his most important agent, remains shrouded in official secrecy.
“The decision to release files on Major Frank Foley undermines the argument
that the release of files on his agent, Mr Rosbaud, would cause actual
harm,” Ms Booth wrote. 

Rosbaud died of leukaemia at St Mary’s hospital, London, and was buried at
sea, leaving behind £500, a gold watch, a medal from the American Institute
of Physics, and an enduring mystery. 

Guile of the Griffin

*  Paul Rosbaud, Agent Griffin, worked out elaborate techniques to disguise
the messages that he sent to his MI6 controller, Frank Foley 

*  As a senior employee of Springer Verlag, the huge German publisher,
Rosbaud found that encoded messages could be sent using the text of
published books. He spotted that authors, as vain creatures, tended to study
the first editions of their works closely but were much less scrupulous with
later editions. Words could be rearranged and even inserted in these without
alerting suspicion. The books could be obtained by MI6 agents in neutral
countries, and then shipped to MI6 headquarters in London for decoding 

*  Rosbaud also devised a numerical code system. A specific book would be
agreed on by both the agent and the MI6 decoders, usually an obscure volume
available in both Britain and Germany before the war. Each word in the
message would be a composite of three numbers, referring to the page in the
book, the line on that page, and the number of the word within that line.
The message would then be sent as a long string of numbers, incomprehensible
to anyone who did not know to which book they referred 

*  Rosbaud’s British spymasters also worked out a way to send back messages
via the BBC. If the 9pm BBC broadcast began with the words Da Haus steht am
Hügel (The house is on the hill), this meant that Griffin should look out
for a special message. If Griffin’s handlers wanted more information on,
say, paragraphs 2, 6 and 9, or his previous message, the announcer would
say: “The house has two doors, six windows and nine chimneys” 

Source: The Griffin: The Greatest Untold Espionage Story of World War II, by
Arnold Kramish


 

 

 

Accessed 18 Dec 2006,
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,2-2506830,00.html

 

 



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