Kim Philby
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
- 1919 Attends Aldro preparatory school in Eastbourne
- 1924 Goes to Westminster School
- 1929 Enters Trinity College, Cambridge at the age of 17 to read history.
- 1930 Guy Burgess arrives at Trinity from Eton.
- 1931 Joins the Cambridge University Socialist Society CUSS. Labour government of Ramsay MacDonald defeated 27th October. Philby becomes a more ardent socialist. After obtaining only a third in his history exams he transfers to economics.
- 1932 Becomes treasurer of CUSS.
- 1933 Leaves Cambridge a convinced Communist with a degree in economics, then goes to Vienna where Chancellor Dr Engelbert Dollfuss is preparing the first 'putsch' in February 1934. Philby becomes a Soviet agent.
- 1934 Clash between the Austrian government and socialists in Vienna. On Feb 24 Philby marries Litzi Friedman; then in May, after the collapse of the socialist movement in Vienna, he returns with his wife to England. He begins work as a sub-editor of a Liberal monthly review, and joins Burgess as a member of the Anglo-German Fellowship. (Philby edited the fellowship's pro-Hitler magazine, supported by Nazi funds). To cover up his communist background he also makes repeated visits to Berlin for talks with the German Propaganda Ministry and with von Ribbentrop's Foreign Office.
- 1937 In February Philby arrives in Spain to report on the Spanish Civil War from Franco's side. In July he becomes correspondent of The Times with Franco's forces.
- 1938 Awarded the 'Red Cross of Military Merit' by Franco personally.
- 1939 In July, leaves Spain and becomes war correspondent of The Times at the British Headquarters in Arras.
- 1940 In June, after the evacuation of British Forces from the European mainland, he returns to Britain. Recruited by the British Secret Service and attached to the SIS under Guy Burgess in Section D. Assigned to school for under-cover work, but later transferred to the teaching staff of a new school for general training in techniques of sabotage and subversion at Beaulieu, Hampshire.
- 1941 Transferred to SIS, Section V (Five). Philby takes charge of the Iberian sub-section, responsible for British Intelligence in Spain and Portugal.
- 1942 Marries his second wife Aileen Furse. OSS group under Norman Pearson arrives in London for liaison with British Secret Service. Philby's area of responsibility grows to include North African and Italian espionage under newly formed counter-intelligence units.
- 1943 Section V moves from St Albans to London, bringing Philby closer to the centers of power.
- 1944 Appointed head of Section IX, newly created to operate against communism and the Soviet Union.
- 1945 Soviet agent Konstantin Volkov seriously threatens Philby's position by offering to talk.
- 1946 Takes a field appointment - officially as First Secretary with the British embassy in Turkey, actually as head of the Turkish SIS station.
- 1949 Becomes SIS representative in Washington, as senior British Secret Service officer working in liaison with the CIA and the FBI. He sits in on a Special Policy Committee directing the ill-fated Anglo-US attempt to infiltrate anti-communist agents into Albania to topple the Enver Hoxha régime.
- 1950 Guy Burgess arrives in Washington on assignment as Second Secretary of the British Embassy, and Philby invites him to stay at his house.
- 1951 Philby learns of the tightening net of suspicion surrounding Foreign Office diplomat and Soviet agent Donald Maclean, whose British embassy position at the end of the war has placed him on the Combined Policy Committee on Atomic Energy as its British joint secretary. Burgess's alcoholism causes Ambassador Franks to remove him and he returns to England. On May 25, Burgess and Maclean disappear from Britain, with help from Philby, having escaped via the Baltic to the Soviet Union. Philby summoned to London for interrogation and asked to resign from the Foreign Service.
- 1952 In the summer a secret trial takes place in which Philby undergoes questioning about his activities.
- 1955 The British Government publishes a 'White Paper' (report) on the Burgess-Maclean affair. On October 25, questions tabled in parliament asking about the 'third man', Philby. Prime Minster Harold Macmillan, states that no evidence exists of Philby having betrayed the interests of Britain. Nevertheless, the Foreign Service dismisses him because of his association with Burgess.
- 1956 In September Philby goes to Beirut as correspondent of The Observer and The Economist; most intriguingly he continues in SIS employment. But that year Dick White, who suspects Philby of working as a Soviet agent, becomes head of SIS.
- 1957 Aileen, Philby's second wife, dies.
- 1958 Marries Eleanor Brewer.
- 1962 George Blake unmasked. Philby now confirmed as an identified Soviet agent.
- 1963 January 23, Philby disappears in Beirut. The Soviet Union announces that it has granted Philby political asylum in Moscow. On March 3, Mrs. Philby receives a telegram from Philby postmarked Cairo, Egypt. On June 3 Izvestia locates Philby with the Imam of Yemen. On July 1, the British Government admits that Philby had worked as a Soviet agent before 1946 and identifies him as the 'third man'.
- 1965 Awarded the Order of the Red Banner, one of the highest honours of the Soviet Union.
References
- My Silent War by Kim Philby, published by Macgibbon & Kee Ltd, London
- The Philby Literature by Hayden Peake in The Private Life of KIM PHILBY The Moscow Years by Rufina Philby, Mikhail Lyubimov, and Hayden Peake. St. Ermin's Press, 1999.