Pages
264
Year
2019
Language
English

About

Cover Name: Dr. Rantzau is a gripping diary-like personal account of espionage during the Second World War and is one of very few historic memoirs written by an ex- Abwehr officer. Detailed is how Colonel Nikolaus Ritter, following a brief World War I career and over ten years as a businessman in America, returned to Germany in spring of 1935 and became Chief of Air Intelligence in the Abwehr. He was assigned to establish a network of agents to gather information on British and US airfields, aircrafts, and state-of-the-art developments in the aerospace industry. Among others, Ritter's cover names were Dr. Rantzau and Dr. Reinhard in Holland, Belgium, and Luxembourg, Dr. Jansen in Hungary, Dr. Renken in Germany, and Mr. Johnson in America. Throughout his service in the Abwehr, Ritter smuggled America's most jealously guarded secret, the Norden bombsight and the Sperry gyroscope, into Germany, and coordinated the planning for the invasion of the British Isles (Operation Sea Lion). Ritter was incarcerated by the British in 1945 and sent to the Bad Nenndorf interrogation center.
Katharine Ritter Wallace, the daughter of Col. Ritter, presents the first English translation of the German World War II memoir. With a combination of collected documents, correspondences, personal notes, communications with peers, and from memory, this captivating account by an espionage agent reveals an insider's glimpse of the German intelligence service and of a handler's expansive and diverse agent network.

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Reviews

"This is a rare story of a German spy handler in World War II. No racy cars, long-legged women, royal casinos, and jet-set hideaways à la James Bond or George Smiley. Just 'sober and nerve-wracking mosaic work' tinged with 'greed, foolishness, and treason' by an Abwehr spymaster named Niklaus Ritter (Dr. Rantzau). First published in German in 1972, Ritter's memoirs detail his recruiting of agents
Holger H. Herwig, author of The First World War: Germany and Austria-Hungary 1914-1918
"'All I knew about espionage came from reading spy novels,' Nikolaus Ritter writes early in Cover Name: Dr. Rantzau-and then proceeds, with a novelist's flair, to detail how he set about recruiting agents for the German military intelligence service, the Abwehr. At last available in English in this translation by his daughter Katharine R. Wallace, his tale offers a rare glimpse into the workings o
Karen Jensen, editor, World War II magazine

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