David Irving
recalls something of the history of this
book:
IN 1967 William Kimber Ltd published my books
Breach of
Security; the book translated a
principal FA (Forschungsamt) document of World
War II, summarising the wiretaps placed by this
agency of Hermann Göring's ministry on all
the foreign embassies in Berlin in the last
twelve months of peace, 1938-1939.
The FA also maintained a very skilled
codebreaking section. My mentor and long-time
colleague Professor Donald Cameron Watt,
doyen of British real historians, emeritus
professor of history at the London School of
Economics, wrote the lengthy Introduction.
The FA history had been treated as
particularly sensitive by the Allies. Its
operatives were rounded up and coerced into
Allied post-war agencies. Its surviving archives
were swallowed by the National Security Agency
and other such bodies. But scattered items
through the world's archives enabled a
paper-trail to be followed and an account of the
shadowy, but vast, organisation to be pieced
together.
Over the following years I maintained a
dossier on the FA; documents produced by, and
about, the FA were always very few and far
between, and its former operatives were unusally
tightlipped. for obvious reasons.
I finally published a much enlarged history
of the FA in German late 1989.
Das Reich hört
mit (Arndt Verlag, Kiel) is the
result. One day I will get round to translating
it into English (I wrote it in
German).
This page uploaded
Thursday, August 5, 2004