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Infamous UK spy Kim Philby talks of ‘treachery’ in secret video

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The only known footage of Britain's biggest Cold War traitor, Kim Philby, discussing his life as a double agent has been unearthed in Berlin, the BBC said Monday.

In the grainy 1981 video, Philby, who defected to the Soviet Union, is seen giving an hour-long lecture to spies in then communist East Germany.

The BBC said it found the footage in the official archives of the Stasi, the East German intelligence service.

It said the previously unseen footage shows Philby discussing how he went about betraying his country.

Philby was one of the Cambridge Five spy ring, a group of upper class men shockingly uncovered as traitors to Britain.

After his cover was blown, he fled from Beirut to Moscow in 1963 and spent the last 25 years of his life in the Soviet Union.

In the footage Philby begins his lecture with "Dear comrades", then says he is "no public speaker", having spent most of his life trying to avoid publicity.

He talks about how he rose through the ranks of Britain's Secret Intelligence Service (SIS), the foreign intelligence agency dubbed MI6, while secretly passing on information to his Soviet contacts.

"You have probably all heard stories that the SIS is an organisation of mythical efficiency, a very, very dangerous thing indeed," he said.

"Well, in a time of war, it honestly was not."

He said he befriended the MI6 archivists by going out for drinks with them two or three times a week.

"Every evening I left the office with a big briefcase full of reports which I had written myself, full of files taken out of the actual documents -- out of the actual archives," he said.

"I used to hand them to my Soviet contact in the evening. The next morning I would get the file back, the contents having been photographed, and take them back early in the morning and put the files back in their place.

"That I did regularly, year in, year out."

He was appointed number two in a new SIS section devoted to countering Soviet espionage.

He was then instructed by his KGB employers to unseat his boss in order to become head of the department, which he did.

"I set about the business of removing my own chief. You oughtn't to listen to this," he told the East German spies, drawing laughter.

"It's a very, very dirty story, but, after all, our work does imply getting dirty hands from time to time," he added.

Taking questions afterwards, he advises the East German intelligence officers to never confess during an interrogation.

Philby died in Moscow aged 76 in 1988 before the collapse of the Soviet Union.

The only known footage of Britain’s biggest Cold War traitor, Kim Philby, discussing his life as a double agent has been unearthed in Berlin, the BBC said Monday.

In the grainy 1981 video, Philby, who defected to the Soviet Union, is seen giving an hour-long lecture to spies in then communist East Germany.

The BBC said it found the footage in the official archives of the Stasi, the East German intelligence service.

It said the previously unseen footage shows Philby discussing how he went about betraying his country.

Philby was one of the Cambridge Five spy ring, a group of upper class men shockingly uncovered as traitors to Britain.

After his cover was blown, he fled from Beirut to Moscow in 1963 and spent the last 25 years of his life in the Soviet Union.

In the footage Philby begins his lecture with “Dear comrades”, then says he is “no public speaker”, having spent most of his life trying to avoid publicity.

He talks about how he rose through the ranks of Britain’s Secret Intelligence Service (SIS), the foreign intelligence agency dubbed MI6, while secretly passing on information to his Soviet contacts.

“You have probably all heard stories that the SIS is an organisation of mythical efficiency, a very, very dangerous thing indeed,” he said.

“Well, in a time of war, it honestly was not.”

He said he befriended the MI6 archivists by going out for drinks with them two or three times a week.

“Every evening I left the office with a big briefcase full of reports which I had written myself, full of files taken out of the actual documents — out of the actual archives,” he said.

“I used to hand them to my Soviet contact in the evening. The next morning I would get the file back, the contents having been photographed, and take them back early in the morning and put the files back in their place.

“That I did regularly, year in, year out.”

He was appointed number two in a new SIS section devoted to countering Soviet espionage.

He was then instructed by his KGB employers to unseat his boss in order to become head of the department, which he did.

“I set about the business of removing my own chief. You oughtn’t to listen to this,” he told the East German spies, drawing laughter.

“It’s a very, very dirty story, but, after all, our work does imply getting dirty hands from time to time,” he added.

Taking questions afterwards, he advises the East German intelligence officers to never confess during an interrogation.

Philby died in Moscow aged 76 in 1988 before the collapse of the Soviet Union.

AFP
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