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Mission to Tashkent

de F. M. Bailey

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'one of the best books about secret intelligence work ever written' Peter Hopkirk.Colonel F. M. Bailey, whose extraordinary adventures are told here, was long accused by Moscow of being a British master-spy sent in 1918 to overthrow the Bolsheviks in Central Asia. As a result, he enjoyed many years after his death an almost legendary reputation there - that of half-hero,half-villain.In this remarkable book he tells of the perilous game of cat-and-mouse, lasting sixteen months, which he played with the Bolshevik secret police, the dreaded Cheka. At one point, using a false identity, he actually joined the ranks of the latter, who unsuspectingly sent him to Bokhara to arresthimself.Told with almost breathtaking understatement, Bailey's narrative - set in a region once more back in the headlines - reads like vintage Buchan.… (mais)
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Exibindo 3 de 3
Don't you hate it when you infiltrate the enemies spy service and then they send you to find and arrest yourself?

Well that really happened to this British diplomat who spent a significant amount of time dodging the Bolsheviks in Teshkent who probably would have killed him if they caught him. It's great being reminded about the horrors of communism every once and again as it's easy to forget how terrible it must be to live under such social agony. For instance, he mentioned a couple who were arrested. He was sentenced to three years in prison for saying something negative about the state. The wife was sentenced to a year in jail for failing to denounce him when he said it. How would you like to live in a society like that?

This takes place from 1918 to 1921ish. ( )
1 vote Chris_El | Mar 19, 2015 |
A stirring tale of boys own courage from a different age. Particular amusing when he is recruited by the Cheka to search for himself. Remarkable be died only forty years ago. ( )
  jontseng | Jan 2, 2007 |
Mission to Tashkent is a great story. Colonel Bailey, who had already had an interesting and varied career, was sent, in March 1918 on a secret mission to Tashkent. He was to try to discover what was going on there following the Russian revolution and the Bolshevik seizure of power; the underlying purpose of the mission being to try to keep Turkestan in the war against Germany. The lack of knowledge is nicely summed up in this statement:

"The position of Russian Turkestan was obscure. We knew that Bolsheviks were in control but no one quite knew what a Bolshevik was or what were his aims and objectives. It seemed that it would be useful to go and see them, and find out what sort of people they were and to try to persuade them to continue the war against Germany, or at least not to help the Central Powers in the war against us."

The mission was not easy from the beginning with the Bolsheviks very suspicious of what Bailey was up to, plus all the political currents swirling around the civil war with the Whites, Moscow's attempts to assert control over Turkestan, the general opposition to communism and the Bolsheviks, the incredibly complex cultural and historical ties that bound varies groups together, and the constant shifting of alliances and allegiances such that it was very difficult to find and have confidence in people you could trust. After being in Tashkent for some months, Bailey learned that he was to be arrested, so with the help of a number of friends he disappeared into the hinterland, living in small villages and in the mountains in the guise of a Romanian and later an Albanian prisoner of war (there were many such people wandering about in Turkestan). He returned to Tashkent, still in hiding, and then in an amazing twist, through an accomplice who also wanted to escape from Soviet Turkestan, he became a member of the Soviet Army's counter-espionage service. He was sent to Bokhara, then still independent and fiercely opposed to the Bolsheviks, to report on the situation there; 16 previous Bolshevik spies sent to Bokhara had all failed to return! From Bokhara, again in company of his accomplice, he traveled across the desert to safety in Persia, arriving there in January, 1920.

The story is well, and modestly, told, replete with the colour of the towns and cities and countryside, and the amazingly complicated and dangerous lives that people had to live in the struggle to stay alive as the Bolsheviks slowly, but surely, extended their control over the country. The book is a cornucopia of characters, any one of which could provide the basis for an amazing adventure story. It is like a time capsule: a glimpse into a time and circumstances long gone, but the effects of which echo still today.
  John | Nov 29, 2005 |
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F. M. Baileyautor principaltodas as ediçõescalculado
Baker, DenysMapasautor secundárioalgumas ediçõesconfirmado
Hopkirk, PeterIntroduçãoautor secundárioalgumas ediçõesconfirmado
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'one of the best books about secret intelligence work ever written' Peter Hopkirk.Colonel F. M. Bailey, whose extraordinary adventures are told here, was long accused by Moscow of being a British master-spy sent in 1918 to overthrow the Bolsheviks in Central Asia. As a result, he enjoyed many years after his death an almost legendary reputation there - that of half-hero,half-villain.In this remarkable book he tells of the perilous game of cat-and-mouse, lasting sixteen months, which he played with the Bolshevik secret police, the dreaded Cheka. At one point, using a false identity, he actually joined the ranks of the latter, who unsuspectingly sent him to Bokhara to arresthimself.Told with almost breathtaking understatement, Bailey's narrative - set in a region once more back in the headlines - reads like vintage Buchan.

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