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-Obits-
Colonel David Smiley
2009-01-16
An amazing man. And no one, no one, writes an obit like the Brits.
Colonel David Smiley, who died on January 9 aged 92, was one of the most celebrated cloak-and-dagger agents of the Second World War, serving behind enemy lines in Albania, Greece, Abyssinia and Japanese-controlled eastern Thailand.

After the war he organised secret operations against the Russians and their allies in Albania and Poland, among other places. Later, as Britain's era of domination in the Arabian peninsula drew to a close, he commanded the Sultan of Oman's armed forces in a highly successful counter-insurgency.

After his assignment in Oman, he organised -- with the British intelligence service, MI6 -- royalist guerrilla resistance against a Soviet-backed Nasserite regime in Yemen. Smiley's efforts helped force the eventual withdrawal of the Egyptians and their Soviet mentors, paved the way for the emergence of a less anti-Western Yemeni government, and confirmed his reputation as one of Britain's leading post-war military Arabists.

In more conventional style, while commanding the Royal Horse Guards (the Blues), Smiley rode alongside the Queen as commander of her escort at the Coronation in 1953.

During the Second World War he was parachuted four times behind enemy lines. On one occasion he was obliged to escape from Albania in a rowing boat. On another mission, in Japanese-controlled eastern Thailand, he was stretchered for three days through the jungle with severe burns after a booby-trap meant for a senior Japanese officer exploded prematurely.

Though a regular soldier, Smiley was frequently seconded to MI6. As an assistant military attaché in Poland after the war, when the Soviet-controlled Communists were tightening their grip, he was beaten up and expelled as a spy, after an operation he was running had incriminated a member of the politburo.

After that he headed the British side of a secret Anglo-American venture to subvert the newly-installed Communist regime in Albania led by the ruthless Enver Hoxha. But Kim Philby, who was secretly working for the Russians, was the liaison between the British and Americans; almost all the 100 or so agents dropped by parachute or landed by boat were betrayed, and nearly all were tortured and shot. This failure haunted Smiley for the rest of his life.
Posted by:Besoeker

#7  Broadhead6, about your comment last night, could you contact me?
Posted by: trailing wife   2009-01-16 12:16  

#6  awesome, totally fricken awesome. What a guy. God bless him.
Posted by: Andy Ulusoque aka Broadhead6   2009-01-16 12:13  

#5  In the "tinkler, tyalor soldier, spy" novel by John Le Carré" where Smiley has to discover the identity of a very high-ranking MI-5 official (one of the 5 higher), there is charactaer of an action-type guy, called Prideaux, who before the action in the novel, is infiltrated in Czechoslovakia to discover the identity of the traitor only to discover he has walked into a trap and Czechoslovakians are arrested. It looks like it was inspired by Colonel Smiley. At the end of the novel, the traitor in unmasked and arrested. He doesn't feel guilty at all and confidently await for a prisoner exchange with the Soviets. But Prideaux infiltrates the facility where is being guarded and kills him.
Posted by: JFM   2009-01-16 11:06  

#4  Didn't Terry Thomas play him in the movies?
Posted by: Jack is Back   2009-01-16 10:55  

#3  What a man.
Posted by: Lagom   2009-01-16 10:44  

#2  I wonder if he is survived by his younger and quieter brother, the German Lieder scholar.
Posted by: Gleper Speaking for Boskone9294   2009-01-16 07:40  

#1  The British have a habit of producing colorful characters, don't they ? This gentleman seems to have been almost absurdly ubiquitous. One year its Cold War Eastern Europe, another year its the Bridge on the River Kwai, yet another he's invading Persia. If this guys career were made into a work of fiction it would be criticized as being excessively contrived.
Posted by: buwaya   2009-01-16 02:44  

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