AFTER WORD
By John le
Carré
I wrote The
Spy Who Came in from the Cold at the
age of thirty under intense, unshared, personal stress, and in extreme
privacy.
As an intelligence officer in the guise of a junior diplomat at the
British
Embassy in Bonn, I was a secret to my colleagues, and much of the time
to
myself. I had written a couple of earlier novels, necessarily under a
pseudonym,
and my employing service had approved them before publication. After
lengthy soul-searching, they had also approved The Spy Who Came in from
the
Cold. To this day, I don't know what I would have done if they
hadn't.
As it was,
they seem to have concluded, rightly if reluctantly, that the book was
sheer
fiction from start to finish, uninformed by personal experience, and
that
accordingly it constituted no breach of security. This was not,
however, the
view taken by the world's press, which with one voice decided that the
book was
not merely authentic but some kind of revelatory Message From The Other
Side,
leaving me with nothing to do but sit tight and watch, in a kind of
frozen awe,
as it climbed the bestseller list and stuck there, while pundit after
pundit
heralded it as the real thing.
And to my
awe, add over time a kind of impotent anger.
Anger,
because from the day my novel was published, I realized that now and
forevermore I was to be branded as the spy turned writer, rather than
as a
writer who, like scores of his kind, had done a stint in the secret
world and written
about it.
But
journalists of the time weren't having any of that. I was the British
spy who
had come out of the woodwork and told it how it really was, and
anything I said
to the contrary only enforced the myth. And since I was writing for a
public
hooked on Bond and desperate for the antidote, the myth stuck.
Meanwhile, I was
receiving the sort of attention writers dream of. My only problem was,
I didn't
believe my own publicity. I didn't like it even while I was subscribing
to it,
and there was in the most literal sense nothing I could say to stop the
bandwagon, even if I'd wanted to. And I wasn't sure I did.
In the
Sixties-and right up to the present day-the identity of a member of the
British
secret service was and is, quite rightly, a state secret. To divulge it
is a
crime. The service may choose to leak a name when it pleases them. They
may
showcase an intelligence baron or two to give us a glimpse of their
omniscience
and-wait for it-openness. But woe betide a leaky former member.
And anyway I
had my own inhibitions. I had no quarrel with my former employers,
quite the
contrary. Presenting myself to the press in New York a few months after
the
novel had made its mark in the States, I dutifully if nervously mouthed
my
denials: no, no, I had never been in the spy business; no, it was just
a bad
dream: which of course it was.
The paradox
was compounded when an American journalist with connections told me out
of the
corner of his mouth that the reigning chief of my service had advised a
former
director of the CIA that I had been his serving officer, and that he
had told
nobody but his very large retinue of best friends, and that anyone in
the room
who was anyone knew I was lying.
Every
interview I have faced in the fifty years since then seems designed to
penetrate a truth that isn't there, and perhaps that's one reason why I
have
become allergic to the process.
The Spy Who
Came in from the Cold was the work of a wayward imagination
brought to
the end
of its tether by political disgust and personal confusion. Fifty years
on, I
don't associate the book with anything that ever happened to me, save
for one wordless
encounter at London airport when a worn-out middle-aged military kind
of man in
a stained raincoat slammed a handful of mixed foreign change onto the
bar and
in gritty Irish accents ordered himself as much Scotch as it would buy.
In that
moment, Alec Leamas was born. Or so my memory, not always a reliable
informant,
tells me.
Today I
think of the novel as a not-very-well-disguised internal explosion
after which
my life would never be the same. It was not the first such explosion,
or the last.
And yes, yes, by the time I wrote it, I had been caught up in secret
work off
and on for a decade; a decade the more formative because I had the
inherited
guilt of being too young to fight in the Second World War and-more
importantly-of being the son of a war profiteer, another secret I felt
I had to
keep to myself until he died.
But I was
never a mastermind, or a mini-mind, and long before I even entered the
secret
world, I had an instinct towards fiction that made me a dubious fact
gatherer. I
was never at personal risk in my secret work; I was frequently bored
stiff by
it. Had things been otherwise, my employers would not have allowed me
to
publish my novel, even if later they kicked themselves for doing so:
but that
was because they decided it was being taken too seriously by too many
people;
and because any suggestion that the British secret service would betray
its own
was deemed derogatory to its ethical principles, bad for recruitment,
and
accordingly Bad for Britain, a charge to which there is no effective
answer.
The proof
that the novel was not "authentic"-how many times did I have to repeat
this?-had been delivered by the fact that it was published. Indeed, one
former
head of a department that had employed me has since gone on record to
declare
that my contribution was negligible, which I can well believe. Another
described
the novel as "the only bloody double-agent operation that ever
worked"-not
true, but fun. The trouble is, when professional spies go out of their
way to
make a definitive statement about one of their own, the public tends to
believe
the opposite: which puts us all back where we started, myself included.
And if the
spies hadn't had me at that age, some equally luckless institution
would have
done, and after a couple of years I'd have been digging my way out.
And the deep
background of the novel? The sights, smells, and voices that, fifteen
years
after the end of the war, continued to infest every corner of divided
Germany?
The Berlin in which Leamas had his being was a paradigm of human folly
and
historical paradox. In the early Sixties I had observed it mostly from
the
confines of the British Embassy in Bonn, and only occasionally in the
raw. But
I watched the Wall's progress from barbed wire to breeze block; I
watched the
ramparts of the Cold War going up on the still-warm ashes of the hot
one. And I
had absolutely no sense of transition from the one war to the other,
because in
the secret world there barely was one. To the hard-liners of East and
West the
Second World War was a distraction.
Now it was
over, they could get on with the real war that had started with the
Bolshevik
Revolution in 1917, and had been running under different flags and
disguises
ever since.
No wonder
then if Alec Leamas found himself rubbing shoulders with some pretty
unsavory
colleagues in the ranks of Western intelligence. Former Nazis with
attractive
qualifications weren't just tolerated by the Allies; they were
positively
mollycoddled for their anti-Communist credentials. Who was America's
first
choice to head West Germany's embryonic intelligence service? General Reinhard Gehlen, former chief of
Hitler's Foreign Armies East (Russian theater), where he had made
himself a
corner in the Soviet order of battle. Anticipating Germany's defeat,
the
General had assembled his files and his people, and at the first
opportunity
turned them over to the Americans, who accepted them with open arms.
Recruited,
Gehlen tactfully dropped the "General" and became "Herr
Doktor" instead.
But where to
house this precious asset and his crown jewels? The Americans decided
to
install Gehlen and his people in the cosy Bavarian village of Pullach,
some
eight miles outside Munich and handy for their intellizence
headquarters. And
whose handsome country estate, now vacant, did they select for Herr Doktor? Martin Bormann was Hitler's
most trusted confidant and private secretary. When the Fuhrer
established
himself at his Eagle's Nest just up the road, his buddies scurried to
set up
house nearby. Gehlen and hi people were settled in Martin Bormann's
villa, now
the subject of a conservation order issued by the Bavarian government.
Just a
few years ago, in circumstances of extraordinary courtesy, one of the
Bundesnachnchtendienst's latter-day luminaries gave me a personal tour.
I
recommend the 1930s furniture in the conference room, and the
Jugendstil
statues in the gardens at the back. But the main
attraction must surely be the great dark staircase winding into the
cellars,
and the fully furnished bunker, just like the Fuhrer's, but smaller.
Was Alec
Leamas a regular visitor to Pullach? He had no choice. Few secret
operations
into East Germany could take place without the connivance of the BND.
And did
Leamas, on his regular visits, perhaps come across Herr Doktor's valued
chief
of counterintelligence, Heinz Felfe, formerly of the SS and
Sicherheitsdienst?
He must have done. Felfe was a legendary operator. Had he not
single-handedly
unmasked a raft of Soviet spies? Of course he had, and no wonder. When
he was
finally unmasked himself, he got fourteen years for spying for Moscow,
only to
be traded for a bunch of hapless West Germans held there.
Did Leamas
enjoy access to the ultra-secret "special material" obtained by
Operation
GOLD, the hugely costly quarter-mile-long Anglo-American audio tunnel
that
tapped into Russian cables a couple of feet below the surface of a road
in the
Eastern Sector of Berlin? Before the first spade went into the ground,
GOLD had
been comprehensively blown by a Soviet agent named George Blake, the
heroic
ex-prisoner of North Korea and pride of the British secret service. Yet
to this
day, many of GOLD's architects would have us believe that their
operation was
not merely an engineering triumph but an intelligence coup as well, on
the
questionable grounds that, so reluctant were the Russians to blow their
agent,
they let communications flow as usual. Dissolve to a couple of years
later and
Kim Philby, once in line for chief, was also revealed as Moscow's man.
No
wonder poor Leamas needed that stiff Scotch at London airport. The
service that
owned his unflinching allegiance was in a state of corporate rot that
would
take another generation to heal. Did he know that? I think deep down he
did.
And I think
I must have known it too, or I wouldn't have written Tinker Tailor
Soldier Spy
a few years down the line.
The merit of
The Spy Who Came in from
the Cold, then-or its offense, depending where
you
stood-was not that it was authentic but that it was credible. The bad
dream
turned out to be one that a lot of people in the world were sharing,
since it
asked the same old question that we are asking ourselves fifty years
later: How
far can we go in the rightful defense of our Western values without
abandoning
them along the way? My fictional chief of the British service-I called
him
Control-had no doubt of the answer:
I mean, you
can't be less ruthless than the opposition simply because your
government's
policy is benevolent, can you now?
Today,
the
same man, with better teeth and hair and a much smarter suit, can be
heard
explaining away the catastrophic illegal war in Iraq, or justifying
medieval
torture techniques as the preferred means of interrogation in the
twenty-first
century, or defending the inalienable right of closet psychopaths to
bear
semiautomatic weapons, and the use of unmanned drones as a risk-free
method of
assassinating one's perceived enemies and anybody who has the bad luck
to be
standing near them. Or, as a loyal servant of his corporation, assuring
us that
smoking is harmless to the health of the Third World and great banks
are there
to serve the public.
What have I
learned over the last fifty years? Come to think of it, not much. Just
that the
morals of the secret world are very like our own. +
John le Carré
The Spy Who Came in from the Cold,
by John le
Carré, is being reissued this month by Penguin. "Fifty Years Later" ©
2013 David Cornwell