Wall Street Journal review of Traitor of Arnhem

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Author: robertverkaik1

I'm an author and journalist writing about espionage, security and social mobility. My first book, Jihadi John, the Making of a Terrorist, was published in 2016. My second book Posh Boys was on private education and public schools. My most recent books have been about espionage in the Second World War, including the Sunday Times best seller, The Traitor of Colditz. My latest book is The Writer and the Traitor published in 2026 which explores one of the most enigmatic relationships of the 20th Century between author Graham Greene and Russian spy Kim Philby who both worked together as MI6 officers.

2 thoughts on “Wall Street Journal review of Traitor of Arnhem”

  1. Dear Mr.Verkaik,

    According to German sources;

    Josephine had sent the message about Operation ‘Market’ (although he mentioned another codename) on Sept.11 1944 via Stockholm, which arrived on the 12th.

    That same day a Belgian V-Mann, and not a Dutchmen, give detailed info about Operation ‘Garden’ and the Start-Line, although he didn’t know it’s codename.

    This source and message is not mentioned in German HQ communications, while that of Josephine was.

    King Kong give his intell days later.

    Now I aggree Anthony Blunt was Josephine.

    Now the interesting thing is that if Blunt and King Kong were Sovjet spies, why did they gave away Market-Garden?

    They couldn’t have known about the Belgian spy.

    Was it because the Allied advance was going to fast and they wanted to slow it down, so Berlin would fall in Sovjet instead of the Allies hands?

    Like

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