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Kim Philby

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Harold Adrian Russell "Kim" Philby (January 1, 1912 - May 11, 1988) spied for the Soviet Union while an employee of British intelligence.

Philby belonged to the spy ring known as the Cambridge Five, along with Donald Maclean, Guy Burgess, Anthony Blunt and John Cairncross. He gained his nickname "Kim" after the title character in Rudyard Kipling's novel Kim, about a young Indian boy who spies for the British in occupied India in the 19th century.

Born in Ambala, India, Philby was the son of Harry St. John Philby, the British diplomat, explorer, author, and Arabist who converted to Islam and who served at one time as an adviser to King Ibn Sa'ud of Saudi Arabia.

After leaving Westminster School in 1928, Philby went on to Trinity College, Cambridge. While a student there Philby became introduced to, and came to admire, the ideals of Communism. The Soviet Union did not exactly 'recruit' him as a spy - he volunteered. He asked one of his tutors, Maurice Dobb, how he could serve the Communist movement. Dobb passed him on (possibly not knowing what it would lead to) to a Communist front organisation, which passed him on to the Comintern underground in Vienna. The Soviet intelligence service itself (at that time known as the OGPU) recruited him on the strength of his work for the Comintern.

After working as a journalist Philby joined the British Secret Intelligence Service (the so-called M.I.6) in 1940, later becoming part of the SOE and coming into contact with OSS agents.

After the war Philby went first to Istanbul. He later became first secretary at the British embassy in Washington. He returned to Britain in 1950 and in 1951 managed to tip off Burgess and Maclean to an internal British intelligence probe: this warning allowed them time to escape to the Soviet Union. Only in 1963 (with the defection of Anatoli Golytsin) did Western intelligence unmask him. Philby escaped to the Soviet Union before they could arrest him.

Philby died in 1988. The Soviet government gave him a hero's funeral.

Tim Powers based the book Declare on Philby's unusual life story, providing a supernatural explanation for his behavior ("Tradecraft meets Lovecraft"), and a Frederick Forsyth novel, The Fourth Protocol, features an elderly Philby advising a Soviet leader on a plot to influence a British election in 1985.

Chronology of Philby's career

References