◆ SpookStack

Declassified Document Archive & Reader
Log In Register
Reader Ad Slot
Reader Ad Slot placeholder
If you would like to support SpookStack without paying out of pocket, please consider allowing advertising cookies. It helps cover hosting costs and keeps the archive free to browse. You can change this choice at any time.

Cambridge Five Spy Ring — Part 25

65 pages · May 09, 2026 · Document date: Jan 27, 1969 · Broad topic: Intelligence Operations · Topic: Cambridge Five Spy Ring · 64 pages OCR'd
← Back to feed
_TOLD HIM THIS, SAYS SON Phill ya Double Agent for 30 Years | LONDON, Oct. son of Harold “Kim” Phy, the British spy who defected to Mos- cow in 1963, said yesterday his faiher “worked for the Russians for 30 years.’ Philby once was Britain's chief liason man in Washington with the CIA. Philby’s son John, 24, told a British Broadcasting Corpora- tion commentary he met his 55 - year - old father im Moscow two weeks apo. “Il have come home," he quoted his father as saying. rarane Philby’s career as a double - agent and the circumstances of his discovery and flight have re- mained subject to speculation and controversy in England, but twa London newspapers yester- day pieced together an account of his aetivities aver three dec- ades that read like an incredible spy novel. Philby was so successful, by these accounts, that at one time he was chief of Britain's anli - Soviet section and came close to being named head of the entire British counter intelligence net- work, MI - 6, before his luck ran out, Philby. graduated from Cam- bridge University in 1933. One year lafer he began a long ca- reer with Soviet intelligence by beeoming” a covrier. He soon graduated to higher level Soviet mielligence work. During the late 1930s, Philby " Masqueraded as a pro - Nazi uirnatst and reported from the a ES Oey! a POLO Da aha at ie. . the: z KIM PHILBY Franco side of the Spanish Civil War. When World War II broke out, Philby’s old school friends re- cruiled him into British intelli- gence and his carecr rose rapid- ly. By the end of 1944 he headed a new counter - espionage de- pariment directed against the Soviet Union, In 1947, Philby was named Chief of British Intelligence in Turkey and two years later he headed the Washingion staff. Philby’s closest brush with discovery came in 1951 when he lipped off two Soviet spies that their activities had been uncov- ered. British atomic spy Donald Maclean and agent Guy Burgess were able to Flee to the Soviet Union because of Philby's warn- ing. Philby immediately came un- der suspicion from his Amerjcaa + > aa . colleagues and he was dropped ‘from the Washington assign- ment. Slowly, however, Philby worked his way back into Brit- ish confidence. He was sent to Beirut as a correspondent for the British newspaper the Ob- server, one of the two which printed an article on his activi- ties Sunday. The observer said it had been told Philby was no longer in the spy business. But he was also in Beirut as a British counteres- pionage agent. In 1955, former British Prime Minister Harold MacMillan told the House of Commons thatfi Philby was not the “third man” who tipped off Burgess and Ma- clean four years earlier. Philby continued his double - agent activities until 1961, when a Soviet defector made allega- tions about his double - agent. background and long history with the Soviet spy system. Philby, still working as a corre- spondent in Beirut, fled to Mos- cow in 1963 when informed that & case was being compiled against him. Philby’s son said his father now was working for a Russian news apency on far eastern al- fairs. = pee Oe ' fe NOT RACORDD _ {8 OCT & 1987 DeLogch Mohr Bishap Casper Callahan Conrad Felt Gale Rosen Sullivan Tavel Trotter Tele. Room Holmes Gandy “I should think he is far less | lonely now,” the younger Philby | said, “He is at last able to live © completely openly. He is a com- Munist and if is a communist country and way of life.’ Philby was s granted Soviet citizenship. The Washington Post Times Heratd The Washington Daily News f The Evening Star (Washington) - The Sunday Star (Washington) Daily News (New York) Sunday News (New York} New York Post The New York Times The Sun (Baltimore) The Worker The New Leader The Wall Street Journal The National Observer People’s World
OCR quality for this page
Community corrections
First editor: none yet Last editor: none yet
No user corrections yet.
Comments
Document-wide discussion. Follow the Community Standards.
No comments on this document yet.
Bottom Reader Ad Slot
Bottom Reader Ad Slot placeholder
If you would like to support SpookStack without paying out of pocket, please consider allowing advertising cookies. It helps cover hosting costs and keeps the archive free to browse. You can change this choice at any time.

Continue Exploring

Use the strongest next step for this document: continue reading, jump to the topic hub, or move into the matching agency collection.
Continue Reading at Page 32
Jump straight to page 32 of 65.
Reader
Cambridge Five Spy Ring — Part 35
Stay inside Cambridge Five Spy Ring with another closely related document.
Topic
FBI Documents & FOIA Archive
Open the FBI agency landing page for stronger archive context.
FBI
Cambridge Five Spy Ring Topic Hub
See the topic overview, related documents, and linked subtopics.
Hub

Agency Collection

This document also belongs in the FBI Documents & FOIA Archive landing page, which is the stronger starting point for agency-level browsing and for searches focused on FBI records.
FBI Documents & FOIA Archive
Open the agency landing page for introduction text, topic links, and more FBI documents.
FBI

Explore This Archive Cluster

This document belongs to the Intelligence Operations archive hub and the more specific Cambridge Five Spy Ring topic page. Use these hub pages when you want the broader collection context, linked subtopics, and more documents around the same archive thread.
Related subtopics
MKULTRA
28 documents · 928 known pages
Subtopic
Interpol
17 documents · 1676 known pages
Subtopic
Basque Intelligence Service
10 documents · 965 known pages
Subtopic
Release 2000 08
2 documents · 77 known pages
Subtopic
08 08 Cia-Rdp96-00789R000100260002-1
1 documents · 4 known pages
Subtopic
08 08 Cia-Rdp96-00789R002600320004-5
1 documents · 12 known pages
Subtopic