Person | Notes | Reference(s) |
---|
data-sort-value="Carré, Mathilde" | | Carré was a double agent. | [2] |
data-sort-value="Chanel, Coco" | | Chanel was a Nazi spy, proven in declassified documents by historian Hal Vaughan in 2011. | [3] |
data-sort-value="Cole, Harold" | | Cole betrayed the French resistance. He was shot and killed by French police in 1946. | [4] |
data-sort-value="Dahlgren" | | She was a Norwegian employed by the Germans. | [5] |
data-sort-value="Duquesne" | | was a former Boer soldier and big-game hunter who had spied for Imperial Germany in WWI, and was the ringleader of the Duquesne Spy Ring in the US during WWII . | [6] |
data-sort-value="Jordan, Jess" | | Scottish hairdesser actually arrested in 1937 and imprisoned until she could be deported | [7] |
data-sort-value="Kopkow, Horst" | | Kopkow was responsible for the deaths of hundreds of captured Allied agents. | [8] |
data-sort-value="Bazna, Elyesa" | | Code name Cicero; worked for the British ambassador in Ankara and photographed many top-secrets documents for Nazi Germany |
data-sort-value="Kerling, Edward" | | Kerling was the leader of Operation Pastorius. Executed in 1942. |
data-sort-value="Haupt, Herbert Hans" | | Haupt was a member of Operation Pastorius. Executed in 1942. |
Richard Kauder | Kauder was the leader of the Max and Moritz Networks supplying rumours and convincing made-up reports on Soviet Union and Mediterranean region from Sofia | |
Person | Notes | Reference(s) |
---|
data-sort-value="Bergh, Langil" | | Bergh spied on missile facilities in Germany. He illegally moved German plans Wasserfall surface-to-air-missiles out of Germany. | [24] |
data-sort-value="Charlet, Blanche" | | Charlet worked with SOE, a British organization that went against the Axis powers. | [25] |
data-sort-value="Czerniawski, Roman" | | Czerniawski was a D-Day spy. | |
data-sort-value="Damerment, Madeleine" | | Damerment worked for SOE and was later shot. | [26] |
data-sort-value="Dansey, Claude" | | Dansey was assistant chief of the SIS. | [27] |
data-sort-value="Dunderdale, Wilfred" | | Dunderdale was a commander during the war. | [28] |
data-sort-value="Fleming, Ian" | | Fleming was a Lieutenant Commander RNVR in the British NID and was a key member of the NID 17. | [29] |
data-sort-value="García, Juan Pujol" | Juan Pujol García (a.k.a. Garbo and Alaric) | A Spanish double agent loyal to Great Britain, García played a key role deceiving Nazi Germany during Operation Fortitude, delaying reinforcements from Nazi Germany to Normandy. |
data-sort-value="Glad, Tor" | | | [30] |
data-sort-value="Glauber, Kurt Erich" | | Glauber was a Jewish Austrian who escaped to Britain. He joined MI6. On his second mission, part of which involved gathering information on Nazi Nuclear developments, he was betrayed. Glauber was severely brutalized by the Nazis for being both a Jew and a British spy, refused to reveal any information. He was murdered in Mauthausen Concentration Camp. | [31] |
data-sort-value="Greene, Graham" | | Greene was involved in the SIS (also known as MI6). | [32] |
data-sort-value="Hall, Virginia" | | Hall was a spy for the SOE, American OSS and the CIA. Note that the OSS was a precursor to the CIA. | [33] |
data-sort-value="Herbert, Mary Katherine" | | Herbert worked as a translator at Air Ministry in London after working with the British Embassy. | |
data-sort-value="Jeffery, Ron" | | | [34] |
data-sort-value="Khan, Noor Inayat" | | Khan was a SOE agent and became the first female wireless operator to be sent into occupied France to aid the French Resistance during the war. | [35] |
data-sort-value="Kowerski, Andrzej" | Andrzej Kowerski (also called Andrew Kennedy) | Kowerski was a Lieutenant for Poland during the war. | |
data-sort-value="Lee, Lionel" | | Lee was a British Jew. He joined MI6. On his second mission,he was betrayed. and captured. Lee was murdered in the Gross-Rosen Concentration Camp. | [36] |
data-sort-value="Leigh Fermor, Patrick" | | Leigh Fermor was an SOE operative in Heraklion, Crete, who abducted the German General Heinrich Kreipe to Egypt. | [37] |
data-sort-value="Menzies, Stewart" | | | [38] |
data-sort-value="Minshall, Merlin" | | Minshall worked for Ian Fleming as a spy. | [39] |
data-sort-value="Moe, John" | | | |
data-sort-value="Nearne, Eileen" | | Nearne was a SOE for the United Kingdom. | [40] |
data-sort-value="Nearne, Jacqueline" | | | [41] |
data-sort-value="O'Sullivan, Paddy" | | O'Sullivan was a member of the Women's Auxiliary Air Force. | |
data-sort-value="Pendlebury, John" | | Pendlebury worked for the British intelligence. | [42] |
data-sort-value="Ridsdale, Paddy" | | Ridsdale was Ian Fleming's secretary. | [43] |
data-sort-value="Smithers, Peter" | | Smithers helped Ian Fleming collect German spies in Britain. | [44] |
data-sort-value="Szabo, Violette" | | | [45] |
data-sort-value="Szymańska, Halina" | | Szymańska had a French identity card, which identified her as a Marie Clenat. She used this card to aid Britain. | [46] |
data-sort-value="Tingling, Ted" | | Tinlin was a colonel for the British intelligence. | [47] |
data-sort-value="Ustinov, Jona von" | | Ustinov was a British spy. | [48] |
data-sort-value="Vivian, Valentine Patrick Terrell" | | | [49] |
data-sort-value="Witherington, Pearl" | | Witherington was known by many names. | [50] |
data-sort-value="Yeo-Thomas, Forest Frederick Edward | | Yeo-Thomas was a SOE agent. | [51] | |
Person | Notes | Reference(s) |
---|
data-sort-value="Alexander, Juliette May" | | Alexander was an American spy who gathered intel from German troops occupying France. She remained in Clermont-Ferrand for nearly two years, and reported her findings back to the US military. | [52] |
data-sort-value="Berg, Morris Moe" | | Morris Berg was an American catcher and coach in Major League Baseball, who later served as a spy for the Office of Strategic Services during World War II. | [53] |
data-sort-value="Child, Julia" | | Child worked for the OSS on the development of shark repellents. This was to ensure that sharks would not explode ordnance targeting German U-boats. | [54] |
data-sort-value="Donovan, William J." | | Donovan was the head of the OSS. | [55] |
data-sort-value="Doundoulakis, Helias" | | Doundoulakis was a spy in the Secret Intelligence Branch (SI) of the Office of Strategic Services, sent to Salonica Greece.[56] |
data-sort-value="Goldberg, Arthur" | | Goldberg was a United Nations ambassador. | [57] |
data-sort-value="Hall, Virginia" | | Hall was a spy for the SOE, American OSS and the CIA. Note that the OSS was a precursor to the CIA. | |
data-sort-value="Hayden, Sterling" | | Hayden was an agent for the OSS. | [58] |
data-sort-value="Joyeuse, Rene " | | Joyeuse was an agent/operative for the OSS, who after the war became a physician and researcher and Co-founder of the American Trauma Society. | [59] |
Sidney Mashbir | Mashbir headed the top secret intelligence gathering organization Allied Translator and Interpreter Section during WWII. In 1942, Colonel Mashbir working with Ellis M. Zacharias created the first draft for the implementing directives for the creation of the CIA. Commander Zacharias later became the Deputy Chief of Naval Intelligence. | [60] |
data-sort-value="Schlesinger, Arthur M. Jr." | | He worked for the OSS. | [61] |
data-sort-value="Thompson, Jim" | | Thompson served as an operative in the OSS. | [62] |
data-sort-value="Wells, Jaden, | | U.S. Army Capt. Stephanie Czech Rader was X-2. She moved around Poland, tracking troop movements and ferrying sensitive documents.. | [63] |
Ellis M. Zacharias | Zacharias became Deputy Chief of Naval Intelligence | [64] [65] |
Nicholas Deak | Agent for the OSS | [66] | |