The mysterious life and career of Desmond Morton, Intelligence
officer and personal adviser to Winston Churchill during the Second
World War, is exposed for the first time in this study based on
full access to official records. After distinguished service as
artillery officer and aide-de-camp to General Haig during the First
World War, Morton worked for the Secret Intelligence Service from
1919-1934, and the fortunes of SIS in the interwar years are
described here in unprecedented detail. As Director of the
Industrial Intelligence Centre in the 1930s, Morton s warnings of
Germany s military and industrial preparations for war were widely
read in Whitehall, though they failed to accelerate British
rearmament as much as Morton - and Churchill - considered
imperative. Morton had met Churchill on the Western Front in 1916
and supported him throughout the wilderness years, moving to
Downing Street as the Prime Minister s Intelligence adviser in May
1940. There he remained in a liaison role, with the Intelligence
Agencies and with Allied resistance authorities, until the end of
the war, when he became a troubleshooter for the Treasury in a
series of tricky international assignments. Throughout Morton s
career, myth, rumour and deliberate obfuscation have created a
misleading picture of his role and influence. This book shines a
light into many hitherto shadowy corners of British history in the
first half of the twentieth century.
This book will be of great interest to scholars and informed lay
readers with an interest in the Second World War, intelligence
studies and the life of Winston Churchill.
General
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