Brendon Cole at Newsweek.com offers a piece on the reemergence of SMERSH, the Russian murder organization.
A counterintelligence
directorate created by former Soviet Union leader Joseph Stalin and made famous
by the James Bond novels of author and former British spy Ian Fleming has
reportedly made a return to Russia.
SMERSH is a portmanteau of the Russian for "death to spies," or "smert shpionam." It was announced in 1943 as a move to target Nazi spy rings, traitors and foreign agents during the World War II, before it was disbanded in 1946.
Fleming portrayed the group as cold-blooded foes of James Bond. One of his characters was Rosa Klebb—an assassin handy with a flick-knife shoe, who was played by Austrian actress Lotte Lenya in the 1963 film version of From Russia with Love.
A former British
diplomat has told Newsweek that
the reported re-emergence of SMERSH was
"inevitable" given Vladimir Putin's comments about cracking down on
"traitors" since the start of his full-scale invasion of Ukraine.
Not just a byword for the brutality of the Stalin
era, SMERSH has been recreated in the present day to hunt down intelligence
officers Moscow believes are targeting Russia, the British Ministry of Defence
said on Monday.
You can read the rest of the piece via the below
link:
Putin Goes Full Bond Villain (newsweek.com)
Ben Macintyre, a columnist for the London Times and the author of “The Spy and the Traitor: The Greatest Espionage Story of the Cold War,” “A Spy Among Friends: Kim Philby and the Great Betrayal,” and other fine books on spies and espionage, wrote about a Russian GRU (military intelligence) assassination group operating in Europe that is the descendant of the Soviet assassination organization SMERSH, the counterintelligence unit that inspired Ian Fleming, I wrote in my Washington Times review of Heidi Blake's From Russia With Blood.
“If the idea of a ruthless spy-killing unit sounds like the
stuff of fiction, that’s because it became precisely that,” Ben Macintyre wrote
in his Times column. “In the James Bond novels, Ian Fleming portrayed Smersh
(director of operations: Rosa Klebb) as a massive counterintelligence network
that more closely resembled the KGB.”
Ben Macintyre wrote that the real SMERSH was effective in not only
murdering Soviet traitors (some of whom were undoubtedly innocent, he noted),
but SMERSH also instilled terror among potential enemies and enforced obedience
in Soviet citizens.
“And now it is back, with a new name and a new remit but
essentially the same purpose: to put the fear of God, and assassination,
into Russia’s enemies, traitors and deserters,” Mr. Macintyre
wrote. “According to intelligence sources, Unit 29155 is an elite sub-unit of
GRU assassins that operated out of the Haute-Savoie in the French Alps,
conducting a variety of wet jobs across Europe: notably the attempted poisoning
in Salisbury of GRU officer-turned-MI6 spy Sergei Skripal, and the attempt to
kill a Bulgarian arms dealer in 2015.”
In Ian Fleming’s classic 1957 thriller “From Russia With
Love,” James Bond was the target of a SMERSH plot to assassinate him and
discredit British intelligence in a scandal. SMERSH sent out from Russia a
psychopath assassin named Red Grant to kill Bond. Ian Fleming admitted that his
plots were fantastic, but he also said they often lifted the tip of the veil to
reveal the real world of espionage.
Heidi Blake’s “From Russia With
Blood” (a clever take on Ian Fleming’s “From Russia With
Love” title), lifts the veil off a series of murders in the United Kingdom and
places blame squarely on Russian leader Vladimir Putin.
You can read the rest of the piece via the below link:
BOOK REVIEW: 'From Russia With Blood' - Washington Times
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