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Agent 110: An American Spymaster and the German Resistance in WWII

por Scott Miller

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In November 1942, American spymaster Allen Dulles slipped into Switzerland just before Nazi forces sealed the border. His mission: to report on the inner workings of the Third Reich. Code-named Agent 110 by the OSS, he discovered a network of Germans -- industrialists, students, diplomats, and generals -- conspiring to overthrow Hitler. Dulles was reluctant to help what looked like a lost cause. The Gestapo had penetrated anti-Nazi rings, rounding up their members with ruthless efficiency. Brave attempts to stage a coup or blow Hitler's plane from the sky had failed. Dulles also knew there was little appetite in Washington for giving the German underground what they coveted most -- the assurance that Germany would be well treated after the war. Instead, President Franklin Roosevelt would accept nothing less from Germany than unconditional surrender. Aided by his mistress, an American journalist, Dulles built a network of secret agents and secured the trust of resistance leaders. In clandestine meetings on bridges, in cemeteries, and high in the Alps, he became convinced that Moscow aimed to dominate postwar Europe. His new German friends offered him a chance to thwart those ambitions. Agent 110 organized commando raids and schemed to protect his informants from the Gestapo. He desperately sought Washington's support in Operation Valkyrie, a plan that nearly succeeded in killing Hitler, and worked with a ruthless Nazi SS general to secure the surrender of all German forces in Italy. Dulles himself would eventually lead the CIA during the Cold War, driven by his wartime distrust of the Soviets.… (más)
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In Agent 110 Scott Miller gives an excellent overview of both Allen Dulles' early work in the intelligence community as well as the German resistance during WWII. There is enough detail to keep the work flowing but stops short of becoming bogged down in minutiae as some history books will do.

While the focus is on Dulles and includes his personal life (though the line between personal and professional was a bit bleary) this is not a biography. Likewise this is not a detailed examination of the German resistance. Rather this is a look, again focused on Dulles, at the intersection of US intelligence and the German resistance. Appraising as such, in other words, judging it for what it tried to do and not what it never tried to do, Miller succeeds in his task. No, there is not a lot of dramatic action, this is not a fictionalized novel of the period.

While the minimization of smaller details helped to make this more readable there is plenty of sources for those interested to look into if they desire. Rather than get stuck qualifying and citing everything within the text itself there are plenty of notes and other sources. Wonder where Miller found his information? With a minimal amount of due diligence, like turning to the back of the book, you can find 32 pages of notes and 12 pages of a bibliography. If you don't want to exert such Herculean effort then the bit you wonder about must not be too important to you.

The notes and bibliography also provide multiple opportunities for historians and/or those curious to follow their own lines of inquiry. I find such things to be a wonderful opportunity for delving deeper into an aspect of a story that interests me.

I would recommend this to readers of WWII history, intelligence and spy history and those interested in Dulles himself.

Reviewed from a copy made available through Goodreads' First Reads. ( )
  pomo58 | May 3, 2017 |
I had no problem whatsoever reading AGENT 110.....there are a lot of historical details but nothing that would bog an interested reader down! Allen Dulles was initially described by the English as being " a Yankee doodle-dandy blow-in who has little to provide in real intelligence." The man more than made up for any naivete' by the end of the war.....he played a big part in creating the OSS and was there for its disintegration. He walked a fine line placating the Germans as well as the politicians in Washington and he did it well!

AGENT 110 has names that all will recognize. BUT! IF i had the chance to meet anyone....it would be Stauffenberg - in fact i am looking for other reading about this murdered, aristocratic, assassin......
RELEVANT QUOTE " the fuhrer reminded him of some of his patients who were so attuned to their inner voices and visions they wouldn't listen to anybody else." Jung. hmmmm ( )
  linda.marsheells | Mar 31, 2017 |
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In November 1942, American spymaster Allen Dulles slipped into Switzerland just before Nazi forces sealed the border. His mission: to report on the inner workings of the Third Reich. Code-named Agent 110 by the OSS, he discovered a network of Germans -- industrialists, students, diplomats, and generals -- conspiring to overthrow Hitler. Dulles was reluctant to help what looked like a lost cause. The Gestapo had penetrated anti-Nazi rings, rounding up their members with ruthless efficiency. Brave attempts to stage a coup or blow Hitler's plane from the sky had failed. Dulles also knew there was little appetite in Washington for giving the German underground what they coveted most -- the assurance that Germany would be well treated after the war. Instead, President Franklin Roosevelt would accept nothing less from Germany than unconditional surrender. Aided by his mistress, an American journalist, Dulles built a network of secret agents and secured the trust of resistance leaders. In clandestine meetings on bridges, in cemeteries, and high in the Alps, he became convinced that Moscow aimed to dominate postwar Europe. His new German friends offered him a chance to thwart those ambitions. Agent 110 organized commando raids and schemed to protect his informants from the Gestapo. He desperately sought Washington's support in Operation Valkyrie, a plan that nearly succeeded in killing Hitler, and worked with a ruthless Nazi SS general to secure the surrender of all German forces in Italy. Dulles himself would eventually lead the CIA during the Cold War, driven by his wartime distrust of the Soviets.

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