Read The Defence of the Realm Online
Authors: Christopher Andrew
The creation of the Special Branch proved insufficient to solve the problem of intelligence during the Emergency. Lieutenant General Sir Harold Briggs, who became director of operations in Malaya in 1950, complained: âUnfortunately our Intelligence organisation is our “Achilles heel” . . . when it should be our first line of attack. We have not got an organisation capable of sifting and distributing important information quickly.'
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At the heart of the problem was poor civilâmilitary co-ordination; the Chief of Police and the Director of Military Intelligence were not on speaking terms. Faced with a flurry of attacks by Communist guerrillas and declining morale among the European population in 1950 and 1951, there were moments when the British feared they might be losing the war. In October 1951 the high commissioner, Sir Henry Gurney, was killed by guerrillas while being driven in his Rolls-Royce.
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Oliver Lyttelton, who had just become colonial secretary in Churchill's government, had no doubt that Malaya was his most pressing problem: âIt was evident that we were well on the way to losing control of the country, and soon.'
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Lyttelton, however, was too pessimistic. During the latter part of 1950, Briggs had begun establishing throughout the squatter areas of Malaya fortified ânew villages', floodlit at night and constantly monitored during the day to prevent guerrilla penetration. As Chin Peng, the guerrilla leader as well as secretary general of the Communist Party of Malaya, later acknowledged, during the first half of 1951 the âBriggs Plan' âbegan directly affecting our food supplies' and eventually severed the supply lines.
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The problems of civilâmilitary co-ordination in Malaya were largely solved by the appointment in February 1952 of General (later Field Marshal) Sir Gerald Templer, a former director of military intelligence in London, to the combined post of high commissioner and director of operations, which gave him greater power than any British general since Oliver Cromwell three centuries before.
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âThe Emergency', he declared, âwill be won by our intelligence system â our Special Branch.'
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The Special Branch, however, required urgent reform and he turned for assistance to the Security Service. âSpecial Branch people here are tricky,' Templer wrote to Sillitoe. â. . . They pout like a lot of petulant children and cannot bear criticism.'
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Templer asked Dick White, who, like Sillitoe, had made a personal tour of inspection in Malaya, to become his director of intelligence. Doubtless with one eye on the succession to Sillitoe, White refused.
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Templer then chose another senior MI5 officer, Jack Morton, previously head of SIFE in succession to Kellar, to become director of intelligence with responsibility for intelligence co-ordination and advising him on the reorganization of the Special Branch.
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The two men worked remarkably closely together.
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Templer accepted Morton's recommendation to split the Special Branch from the CID to allow it to concentrate wholly on counter-insurgency.
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The Communist guerrillas became steadily less effective as Templer's counter-insurgency campaigns and disruption of their supply lines forced them to withdraw deeper and deeper into the jungle. Agent penetration of the guerrillas by the reformed Special Branch achieved some striking successes. In the summer of 1953, after two months of âslogging through the world's thickest jungles', Chin Peng set up a new headquarters at Grik in Northern Malaya, not far from the Thai border, only to be told by the local guerrillas that, though he had yet to be identified, there must be a traitor in their midst. For the past year: âIntended guerrilla operations had been thwarted by the British before they could be launched. Weapons, ammunition and food supplies had been revealed to the enemy and seized. Key Party officials had been betrayed and arrested.' Soon after Chin Peng's arrival in Grik, the traitor was identified when a government cheque for $50,000 was found in the shirt pocket of a local Party secretary. Late in 1953 Chin Peng was forced to move his headquarters into deep jungle across the Thai border.
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In February 1954 Morton reported to Templer, âThere has been a very real all-round progress in the development of the intelligence machine in the last two years.'
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Templer agreed. Morton, he wrote later, âhas done an absolutely first-class job of work and I have a very high opinion of him indeed.'
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Templer's leadership and the close co-ordination of the Special Branch with the security forces turned the Malayan campaign into probably the most successful counter-insurgency campaign of modern times. âWinning hearts and minds', though the phrase was not invented until after the campaign, was an essential part of Templer's strategy. A major programme of road and electricity-grid construction âresulted in an infrastructure that few countries in Asia could match'. There was also, as a senior police officer acknowledged in 1954, âless beating up' of suspects.
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The Security Service accepted that âan Interrogation Centre cannot be run as a welfare institution. It is a place where firm discipline needs to be maintained.' During decolonization, as in the wartime Camp 020,
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however, the Service was firmly opposed to physical violence during interrogation: âMoral consideration alone should suffice to prohibit it. Further, it is the purpose of
interrogation to elicit valid intelligence, whereas extorted confessions are likely to be unreliable.' âLess beating up' thus produced, in the Service's view, better intelligence.
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Particular care was needed when interrogating women. The SLO in Malaya commended guidelines drawn up in 1957 by the Malayan Special Branch: âIn order to command respect from the prisoners, the interrogator must exercise self-respect and avoid foul language. It is completely erroneous for the interrogator to threaten the removal of a female prisoner's clothing and to threaten to expose the prisoner in the nude.'
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By the time Chin Peng emerged from the jungle in 1955 in a vain attempt to seek an amnesty from the Malayan government, it was clear that he had lost the war.
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In the run-up to the independence of the Malayan Federation in 1957, the SLO developed such a close relationship with the future leader of the Federation, Tunku Abdul Rahman, that he was entrusted with the numbers of the combination locks to the Tunku's security safes. Two Security Service officers were seconded to Special Branch in 1958 to help train a new generation of Malay officers.
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When the Emergency was formally ended in 1960, three years after independence, a despondent Chin Peng abandoned his base in the border region and retreated to Beijing.
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While the Malayan Emergency was continuing, Security Service intelligence was also influencing British policy on decolonization in West and East Africa. Soon after the riots in Accra of February 1948 which marked the active beginning of the struggle for independence in the Gold Coast (the future Ghana), Robin âTin-eye' Stephens was appointed SLO with direct access to the Governor, Sir Charles Arden-Clarke.
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Stephens's influence in Accra owed much both to his own powerful personality (previously demonstrated as head of MI5's wartime interrogation centre, Camp 020) and to the fact that for the previous two years the Security Service had been supplying the Colonial Office with reports on the activities of the West African National Secretariat (WANS), founded in London late in 1945 to campaign for independence.
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The politically astute WANS secretary general (and future first Ghanaian prime minister), Kwame Nkrumah, later described the WANS office as the London ârendezvous of all African and West Indian students and their friends. It was there that we used to assemble to discuss our plans, to voice our opinions and air our grievances.'
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Thanks to an HOW,
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many of these plans, opinions and grievances were overheard by the Security Service. The grounds for obtaining the HOW on WANS had been its contacts with the British Communist Party. Telechecks on the CPGB and eavesdropping on its King Street HQ provided further evidence of these links. A note on Nkrumah's file records
that, when he called King Street, he spoke with a âforeign sounding accent' (presumably to disguise his identity), making it difficult for MI5's transcribers to understand him.
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In November 1947, an intercepted telephone conversation between Nkrumah and King Street revealed that he was planning to leave Britain for the Gold Coast.
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When riots broke out in the Gold Coast in February 1948, Nkrumah was arrested and imprisoned by the colonial authorities. After his arrest, he was found to be carrying an unsigned CPGB membership card, together with notes on an organization called the âCircle', led by Nkrumah, whose aim was to establish in West Africa a Union of African Socialist Republics.
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Plans for the Union reflected Nkrumah's own grandiose but unrealistic vision of a united post-imperial Africa, which he claimed implausibly was âprobably better equipped for industrialization than almost any other region in the world' and would develop its own distinctive brand of socialism.
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Hampered by the almost complete lack of reliable intelligence from Moscow during the early years of the Cold War, however, MI5 desk officers admitted to Accra that, though they had never previously heard of the Circle, they thought it possible that Nkrumah's plans might have derived from âoutside' (Soviet) guidance.
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In reality, the KGB â unlike the British Communist Party â still took so little interest in sub-Saharan Africa that it was not until 1960 that its foreign intelligence arm established a department to specialize in that region.
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The Security Service view of Nkrumah and of African nationalism in general, however, was far from alarmist. The DDG, Guy Liddell, told the JIC in December 1949:
in so far as West and East Africa were concerned, there was no evidence of Communism as it was understood in Europe, there was no local Communist Party. There was, however, a lot of nationalism, which received considerable encouragement from all sorts of people who went out to preach British democracy. It was true that niggers coming here often went to the C.P. This did not mean that they were Communists or that they understood anything about Karl Marx or dialectical materialism: it merely meant that they found the Communists sympathetic because they had no racial discrimination and were all in favour of the niggers running their own show.
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Though ânigger' was less outrageously insulting in 1949 than it later became, it was clearly derogatory. Liddell would have been highly unlikely to use it in a formal report to the JIC.
The Security Service concluded in June 1948 that Nkrumah's main motivations were African nationalism and personal ambition: âHis interest
in Communism may well be prompted only by his desire to enlist aid in the furtherance of his own aims in West Africa . . . Although an undoubted nationalist, N'krumah's aims are probably tainted by his wishes for his own personal advancement.'
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Nkrumah's periods in jail after his return to Accra for leading strikes and demonstrations against the colonial administration merely added to his popularity as the Gold Coast's leading nationalist politician. In June 1949 Stephens forecast accurately that, when a general election was held, Nkrumah's newly established Convention People's Party (CPP) was likely to win.
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Over the next year he reported growing popular support for Nkrumah's demands for âSelf Government Now'.
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Like Whitehall and the colonial administration, however, the Security Service failed to foresee the pace of change in both the Gold Coast and the rest of the African empire. Liddell wrote dismissively in his diary after a visit to West Africa in December 1950:
There is no doubt in my mind that the West African natives are wholly unfitted for self-rule . . . You need only to try to buy a set of stamps for 1/- at the Accra Post Office on a hot afternoon; the place is a seething mass of blacks milling round the counter. After a long delay a black clerk will endeavour to add up the sum; it will come out wrong, but it is better not to argue as the delay and frustration would only be greater!
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The head of the Security Service Overseas Service, Sir John Shaw, as well as the SLO, remained in close personal touch with the colonial administration in Accra. On New Year's Eve 1951, Shaw stayed up until 2 a.m. talking on the telephone with the Governor, Sir Charles Arden-Clarke, about the political situation. The future of the Gold Coast, he noted on New Year's Day, depended on Arden-Clarke's ability to get on with Nkrumah. The Governor doubtless welcomed the evidence provided by MI5 from the bugging of the CPGB HQ that Nkrumah had fallen out of favour with the Party. In October 1950, the
Daily Telegraph
ran a story entitled âRed Shadow over the Gold Coast', which claimed that the CPP was orchestrated from Moscow, âusing Ju Ju of darkest Africa'. Nkrumah's intercepted correspondence in both Britain and the Gold Coast told a quite different and far more reassuring story, showing his intention, when he became prime minister in March 1952, to follow the constitutional path to independence. In Shaw's view, intelligence provided grounds for âquiet optimism'.
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As Shaw had forecast, Arden-Clarke's ability to build a successful relationship with Nkrumah was crucial to the smooth transfer of power which led to Ghana becoming the first of Britain's African colonies to achieve independence in 1957.
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